1,519 153 18MB
Pages 622 Page size 244 x 436 pts Year 2008
THE LOEB CLASSICAL LIBRARY EDITED BY T. E.
E.
CAPPS,
PH.D., LL.D.
PAGE, LiTT.D. W. H. D. ROUSE,
STATIUS II
litt.d.
^cfi
STATIUS
f
WITH AN ENGLISH TRANSLATION BY
MOZLEY,
H.
J.
M.A.
SOMETIME SCHOLAR OF KING S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE USCTDEER IN CLASSICS AT EAST LONDON COLLEGE, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON
IN
TWO VOLUMES
J. ^
II
THEBAID
V-XII
•
ACHILLEID
LONDON WILLIAM HEINEMANN LTD NEW YORK: G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS :
MCMXXVIII
;
Printed in Great Britain
CONTENTS OF VOLUME
II
THEBAID BOOKS V-XII
VOL.
11
THEBAIDOS LIBER V Pulsa
sitis fluvio,
agmina linquebant
populataque gurgitis altum^ ripas
amnemque minorem
;
campum
sonipes rapit et pedes arva implet ovans, rediere viris animique minaeque 5 votaque, sanguineis mixtum ceu fontibus ignem hausissent belli magnasque in proelia mentes. dispositi in turmas rursus legemque severi ordinis, ut cuique ante locus ductorque, monentur instaurare vias. tellus iam pulvere primo 10 crescit, et armorum transmittunt fulgura silvae. qualia trans pontum Phariis depvensa serenis acrior et
rauca Paraetonio deeedunt agmina Nilo, quo^ fera cogit hiemps illae clangore fugaei, :
umbra
fretis arvisque, volant,
sonat avius aether,
iam Borean imbresque pati, iam nare solutis amnibus et nudo iuvat aestivare sub Haemo. Hie rursus simili procerum vallante corona dux Talaionides, antiqua ut forte sub orno ^
altum
P
:
alvum w (Z) mith alveum written ^ quo Vollmer cum Pa,-.
15
over).
:
cranes, cf. Virg. Aen. x. 264.. epithet is taken from a town on the Libyan coast west of the Delta. " i.e., *
2
The
named Paraetonium,
THEBAID BOOK V Their thirst was quenched by the river, and the army haWng ravaged the water's depths was lea\"ing the banks and the diminished stream more briskly now the galloping steed scours the plain, and the infantrj' swarm exultant over the fields, inspired once more by courage and hope and warlike temper, as though from the blood-stained springs they had drunk the fire of battle and high resolution for the fray. Marshalled again in squadrons and the stern disciphne of rank, they are bidden renew the march, each in his former place and under the same leader as before. Already the first dust is rising from the earth, and arms are flashing through the trees. Just so do flocks of screaming birds," caught by the Pharian summer, wing their way across the sea from Paraetonian Nile, whither the fierce ^vinter drove them they fly, a shadow upon the sea and land, and their cry follows them, filling the pathless heaven. Soon will it be their delight to breast the north \^ind and the rain, soon to swim on the melted rivers, and to spend the summer days on naked Haemus. Then the son of Talaus, ringed round once more by a band of chieftain peers, as he stood by chance ;
''
;
3
— STATIUS stabat et admoti nixus Polynicis in hastam " at
tamen,oquaecumque
es "ait," cui
:
—gloria tanta
venimus innumerae fato^ debere cohortes, 21 quern non ipse deum sator asp'ernetur honorem, die age, quando tuis alacres absistimus undis, quae domus aut tellus, animam quibus hauseris astris? die, quis et ille pater ? neque enim tibi numina longe, transierit fortuna licet, maiorque per ora 26 sanguis, et adflicto spirat reverentia vultu."
Ingemit, et paulum fletu cunctata modesto
Lemnias orsa
refert
:
"
immania vulnera,
integrare iubes, Furias et
arma
Lemnon
inserta toris debellatosque
rector,
et artis
30
pudendo
ense mares redit ecce nefas et frigida cordi Eumenis. o miserae, quibus hie furor additus o nox o pater ilia ego nam, pudeat ne forte benignae 35 hospitis, ilia, duces, raptum quae sola parentem ;
!
1
!
quid longa malis exordia necto
occului.
?
arma vocant magnique in corde paratus. hoc memorasse sat est claro generata Thoante et vos
:
servitum Hypsipyle vestri fero capta Lycurgi." Advertere animos, maiorque et honora videri parque operi tanto ; cunctis tunc noscere casus ortus amor, pater ante alios hortatur Adrastus
40
:
^
fato MS. at Peterhouse,
Camb.
:
fatum
Poj.
" If "fatum" of most mss. is kept =" our lives," then " honorem," etc., must be in a kind of apposition to the preceding sentence, e.g., " to owe our lives, an honour ." In any case " venimus debere " is doubtful . which Latin, and the line has been variously emended. .
*
4.
i.e.,
where were you born
?
THEBAID,
V. 19-42
beneath an aged ash-tree, and leaned on Polynices' spear hard by him, thus spoke " Nay, tell us, thou, whoe'er thou art. to whom such is thy glory fate " has brought our countless cohorts owing thee such high honour as the Sire of the gods himself would not despise tell us, now that we are departing in all speed from thy waters, what is thy home or native land, from what stars didst thou draw thy life ? ^ And who was that sire thou spakest of ? For heaven is not far to seek in thy descent, though fortune may have been traitorous a nobler birth is in thy looks, and even in affliction thy countenance breathes majesty." The Lemnian sighed, and, stayed by shamefast " Deep are the tears awhile, then makes reply wounds, O prince, thou biddest me revive, the tale of Lemnos and its Furies and of murder done even in the bed's embrace, and of the shameful sword whereby our manhood perished ah the ^Wckedness comes back upon me, the freezing Horror grips
—
:
—
—
;
:
I
;
my
heart Ah miserable they, upon whom this frenzy came alas, that night alas, my father for I am she lest haply ye feel shame for your kindly host I am she, O chieftains, who alone did steal away and hide her father. But why do I weave the long prelude to my woes ? Moreover battle summons you and your hearts' high enterprise. Thus much doth it suffice to tell I am Hypsipyle, born of renowned Thoas, and captive thrall to your !
—
—
!
!
!
I
:
Lycurgus." Close heed they gave her then, and nobler she seemed and worthy of honour, and equal to such a deed then all craved to learn her story, and father Adrastus foremost urged her "Ay, verily, while ;
:
— STATIUS "
immo age, dum primi longe damus agmina vulgi nee facilis Nemee latas evolvere vires, quippe obtenta comis et ineluctabilis umbra 45 pande nefas laudesque tuas gemitusque tuorum, unde lios advenias regno deiecta labores." Dulce loqui niiseris veteresque reducere questus. " Aegaeo premitur circumflua Nereo incipit I^emnos, ubi ignifera fessus respirat ab Aetna 50 Mulciber ingenti tellurem proximus umbra vestit Athos nemorumque obscurat imagine pontum Thraces arant contra, Thracum fatalia nobis litora, et inde nefas. florebat dives alunmis 55 terra, nee ilia Samo fama Delove sonanti peior et innumeris quas spumifer adsilit Aegon. dis visum turbare domos, nee pectora culpa nostra vacant nullos Veneri sacravimus ignis, nulla deae sedes movet et caelestia quondam corda dolor lentoque inrepunt agmine Poenae, 60
—
:
;
;
:
;
Paphon veterem centumque altaria linquens nee vultu nee crine prior solvisse iugalem ilia
ceston et Idalias procul ablegasse volucres fertur. erant certe, media quae noctis in umbra divam alios ignes maioraque tela gerentem Tartareas inter thalamis volitasse sorores vulgarent, utque implicitis arcana domorum anguibus et saeva formidine nupta replesset^ limina nee fidi populum miserata mariti. ^
nupta replesset
P
:
cuncta replevit
05
w.
explain " with oracles," but the more likely mean"with dashing waves," as in the next line. * i.e., the Aegean Sea. ' lit., " not as she previously was in respect of ... " Cf. xi. 459, " non habitu, quo nota prius, non ore sereno." "
ing
6
Some
is
THEBAID, we
V. 43-69
—
columns of our van nor readily allow a broad host to draw clear, so closely hemmed is she by woodland and entanghng shade tell us of the crime, and of thy praiseworthy deed and the sufferings of thy people, and how cast out from thy realm thou art come to this toil of thine." Pleasant is it to the unhappy to speak, and to recall the sorrows of old time. Thus she begins : " Set amid the encircUng tides of Aegean Nereus set in long array the
does
Nemea
—
Lemnos, where Mulciber draws breath again from Aetna Athos hard by clothes the land with his mighty shadow, and darkens the sea with the image of his forests opposite the Thracians plough, the Thracians, from whose shores came our sin and doom. Rich and populous was our land, no less renowned than Samos or echoing " Delos or the other countless isles against which Aegon * dashes in foam. It was the will of the gods to confound our homes, no but our own hearts are not free from guilt sacred fires did we kindle to Venus, the goddess had no slirine. Even celestial minds are moved at last to resentment, and slow but sure the Avenging Powers creep on. She, leaving ancient Paphos and her hundred shrines, with altered looks and tresses,*^ loosed, so they say, her love-alluring girdle and banished her Idalian doves afar. Some, 'tis certain, lies
his labours in fiery
;
;
;
of the
women
told
it
abroad that the goddess,
armed with other torches and deadlier weapons, had flitted through the marriage chambers in the darkness of midnight with the sisterhood of Tartarus about her, and how she had filled every secret place with twining serpents and our bridal thresholds with dire terror, pitying not the people of her 7
STATIUS protinus a
Lemno
teneri fugistis Amores,
mutus Hymen versaeque cura tori
70
faces et frigida iusti
nullae redeunt in gaudia noetes,
!
amplexu sopor est, Odia aspera ubique Furor et medio recubat Discordia lecto.
nullus in et
cura viris tumidos adversa Thracas in ora eruere et saevam bellando frangere gentem. cumque domus contra stantesque in litore nati,
75
dulcius Edonas^ hiemes Arctonque prementem excipere, aut tandem tacita post proelia nocte 80 fractorum subitas torrentum audire ruinas. illae autem tristes nam me tunc libera curis virginitas annique tegunt sub nocte dieque adsiduis aegrae in lacrimis solantia miscent conloquia, aut saevam spectant trans aequoraThracen.
—
Sol
—
operum medius summo
librabat
Olympo
quater axe serene intonuit, quater antra dei fumantis anhelos exseruere apices, ventisque absentibus Aegon motus et ingenti percussit litora ponto cum subito horrendas aevi matura Polyxo tollitur in furias thalamisque insueta relictis evolat. insano veluti Teumesia thyias rapta deo, cum sacra vocant Idaeaque suadet buxus et a summis auditus montibus Euhan sic erecta genas aciemque ofFusa^ trementi sanguine desertam rabidis clamoribus urbem exagitat, clausasque domos et limina pulsans
lucentes, ceu staret, equos
85
;
:
90
:
^
Edonas Servius, *
*
8
i.e.,
oflFusa
edonias Poj. Schol. on Lucan, edd. Barth, Heinsius effusa Pw. :
:
" i.e., Vulcan, who dwelt in Lemnos. Theban> from Teumesus, a mountain of Boeotia.
95
THEBAID,
V. 70-97
Straightway fled ye from Lemnos, Hymen fell mute and turned chill neglect came o'er the iiis torch to earth la\\-ful couch, no nightly return of joy was there, no slumber in the beloved embrace, everywhere reigned bitter Hatred and Frenzy and Discord sundering the partners of the bed. For the men were bent on overthrowing the boastful Thracians across the strait, and warring down the savage tribe. And in despite of home and their children standing on the shore, sweeter it was to them to bear Edonian winters and the brunt of the cold North, or, when at last still night followed a day of battle, to hear the sudden outburst of the crashing mountain torrent. But the women for I at that time was sheltered by care-free maidenhood and tender years sad and sick at heart sought tearful solace in converse day and night, or gazed out across the sea to cruel Thrace. " The sun in the midst of his labours was poising his shining chariot on Olympus' height, as though at halt four times came thunder from a serene sky, four times did the smoky caverns of the god " open their panting summits, and Aegon, though the winds were hushed, was stirred and flung a mighty sea when suddenly the crone Polyxo against the shores is caught up in a dire frenzy, and deserting unwontedly her chamber flies abroad. Like a Teumesian * Thyiad rapt to madness by the god, when the sacred rites are calling and the boxwood pipe of Ida stirs her blood, and the voice of Euhan is heard upon the high hills even so with head erect and quivering bloodshot eyes she ranges up and down the lonely city wildly clamouring, and beating at closed doors ' The Phrygian mountain, where Cybele was worshipped. 9
faithful spouse.
ye tender Loves
:
;
—
—
;
:
'^
:
:
—
STATIUS concilium vocat
comitatus eunti non segnius omnes erumpunt tectis, summasque ad Pallados arces 100 impetus hue propere stipamur et ordine nullo congestae stricto mox ense silentia iussit hortatrix scelerum et medio sic ausa profari rem summam instinctu superum meritique doloris, o viduae firmate animos et pellite sexum 105
haerebant
;
nati.
infelix
atque
illae
:
;
:
'
—
!
—
Lemniades, sancire paro si taedet inanes aeternum servare domos turpemque iuventae ;
flore
situm et longis
steriles in luctibus annos,
—
viam nee numina desunt qua renovanda Venus modo par insumite robur 1 10 luctibus, atque adeo primum hoc mihi noscere detur. tertia canet hiemps cui conubialia vincla inveni, promitto,
:
;
aut thalami secretus honos intepuit
?
?
cui coniuge pectus
cuius vidit Lucina labores,
dicite, vel iustos cuius pulsantia
vota tument
mos
datus.
qua pace heu segnes ?
menses
115
feras volucresque iugari !
potuitne ultricia Graius
virginibus dare tela pater laetusque dolorum
sanguine securos iuvenum perfundere somnos 120 at nos volgus iners ? quodsi propioribus actis est opus, ecce animos doceat Rhodopeia coniunx, ulta manu thalamos pariterque epulata marito. nee vos immunis scelerum securave cogo plena mihi domus atque ingens, en cernite, sudor. :
Danaus, c/, iv. 133 n. Procne, wife of Tereus, kinj^ of Tlirace ; she set before him the flesh of his son Itys. Khodope, a mountain in Thrace. " *
10
•
THEBAID,
V. 98-124
and thresholds suxnmons us to council ; her children clinging to her bear her woeful company. No less eagerly do all the women burst from their houses and rush to the citadel of Pallas on the hill-top hither in feverish haste we press and crowd disorderly. Then with drawn sword she commands silence, and prompting us to crime dares thus to speak among us Inspired by heaven and our just anger, :
:
'
—
steel now your courage and banish thought of sex I make bold to justify a desperate deed. If ye are weary of watching homes for ever desolate, of watching your beauty's flower blight and wither in long barren years of weeping, 1 have found a way, I promise you and the Powers are with us a way to renew the charm of Love ; only take courage equal to your griefs, yea, and of that assure me first. Three winters now have whitened which of us has known the bonds of wedlock, or the secret honours of the marriage chamber ? Whose bosom has glowed with conj ugal love ? Whom has Lucina beheld in travail : Whose ripening hope throbs in the wom.b as the due months draw on r Yet such permission is granted to beasts and birds to unite after their manner. Alas sluggards that we are could a Grecian sire " give avenging weapons to his daughters, and with treacherous joy drench in blood the bridegroom's careless slumber ? And are we then to be but a spiritless mob } Or if ye would have deeds nearer home, lo let the Thracian wife * teach us courage, who with her own hand avenged her union and set the feast before her spouse. Nor do I urge you on, guiltless myself or -without care full is my OMTi house, and huge the struggle. ay, look
widowed Lemnians
!
I
—
—
—
—
!
!
I
—
'
She points
to her four children,
'^
whom
—
it is
:
hard to slay. 11
STATIUS quattuor hos una, decus et solacia patris,
125
amplexu lacrimisque morentur, transadigam ferro saniemque et vulnera fratrum miscebo patremque simul spirantibus addam. ecqua tot in caedes animum promittit ? Agebat in gremio, licet
'
pluribus
Lemnia
adverse nituerunt vela profundo
;
rapuit gavisa Polyxo
elassis erat.
fortunam atque iterat
desumus
ecce rates
?
!
' :
superisne vocantibus ultro
deus hos, deus ultor in
adportat coeptisque favet.
vana meae clara mihi
130
:
iras
nee imago quietis
nudo stabat Venus ense, videri somnosque super " quid perditis aevum ;
135 " ?
inquit " age aversis thalamos purgate maritis. ipsa faces alias melioraque foedera iungam." dixit, et
hoc ferrum
consulite
stratis, hoc, credite,
quin o miserae,
imposuit. ;
en
validis
dum temp us
spumant eversa
ferrum
agi^
rem, 140
lacertis
aequora, Bistonides veniunt fortasse maritae.' hinc stimuli ingentes,
clamor.
magnusque
advolvitur astris
Aniazonio Scythiam fervere tumultu
lunatumque putes agmen descendere, ubi arma indulget pater et saevi movet ostia Belli, nee varius fremor aut studia in contraria rapti dissensus, ut plebe solet
idem animus ^
12
solare
agi Heinsius
:
:
furor
omnibus idem,
domos iuvenumque senumque agit Poi, prob.
from Aen.
v.
638.
145
THEBAID,
V. 125-149
Behold these four together, the pride and comfort of their sire though they should stay me ^ith embraces and tears, even here in my bosom I will pierce them with the sword, and unite the brothers in one heap of wounds and blood, and set their Who of father's corpse on their yet breathing bodies you can promise me a spirit for slaughter so great ? "Yet more was she urging, when yonder out at sea Exultant, white sails shone the Lemnian fleet Polyxo seizes the moment's chance and cries again The gods themselves in\"ite us do we fail them : Heaven, avenging heaven, See, there are the ships brings them to meet our wrath, and favours our resolve. Not vain was the vision of my sleep Avith naked sword Venus stood over me as I slumbered, " Why do ye waste plain to my sight, and cried your hves ? Go, purge your chambers of the husbands who have lost their love I myself will light you other torches and join you in worthier unions." She spoke, and laid this sword, this very sword, beheve it, on my couch. Take heed then, unhappy ones, whilst there is time to act. Lo the waters churn and foam beneath the strong arms of the rowers perchance Thracian brides come vvith ;
I
'
—
!
:
—
'
!
:
:
!
I
them
' !
At
—
this all are vvTought to highest pitch,
and a loud clamour rolls upward to the skies. One would think it was Scythia swarming vvith tumultuous bands of Amazons, trooping to the fight yyith crescent bucklers, when the Father gives rein to armed conflict and flings wide the gates of savage War. Their uproar held no varying voices, nor did dissension cleave into opposing factions, as is the wont of a crowd one frenzy, one purpose inspires all ahke, ;
to lay desolate our homes, to break life's thread for
13
— ST ATI us praecipitare colos plenisque adfr anger e parvos
150
uberibus ferroque omnes exire per annos.
tunc
viridi luco^
mons premit
—lucus iuga celsa Minervae
humum
propter opacat
niger ipse, sed insuper ingens
gemina pereunt caligne
et
hie sanxere fidem, tu
Martia
testis
soles
Enyo
155
atque inferna Ceres, Stygiaeque Acheronte recluso ante preces venere deae sed fallit ubique mixta Venus, Venus arma tenet, Venus admovet iras. nee de more cruor natum Charopeia coniunx ;
:
obtulit, accingunt sese et mirantia ferro
160
pectora congestisque avidae simul undique dextris perfringunt, ac dulce nefas in sanguine vivo coniurant,
matremque recens circumvolat umbra,
talia cernenti
mihi quantus in ossibus horror,
quisve per ora color
circumventa
lupis,
!
qualis
cum
cerva cruentis
165
nullum cui pectore molli
robur et in volucri tenuis fiducia cursu, praecipitat suspensa fugam,
iamiamque teneri
credit et elusos audit concurrere morsus. Illi
aderant, primis iamque ofFendere carinae
litoribus, certant saltu contingere
170
terram
miseri, quos non aut horrida virtus Marte sub Odrysio, aut medii inclementia ponti alta etiam superum delubra vaporant hauserit promissasque trahunt pecudes niger omnibus aris praecipites,
!
:
ignis, et in nuUis spirat ^
14
deus integer
viridi luco
P
:
extis.
vlridis late w.
175
THEBAID,
V. 150-176
young and old, to crush babes against the teeming breasts, and with the sword to make havoc through every age. Then in a green grove a grove that darkens the ground hard by the lofty hill of Minerva, black itself, but above it the mountain looms huge, and the sunlight perishes in a twofold night they pledged their solemn word, and thou wast witness, Martian Enyo, and thou, Ceres of the underworld," and the Stygian goddesses came in answer to their prayers but unseen among them everywhere was Venus, Venus armed, Venus kindling 'vvrath. Unwonted was the blood, for the wife of Charops made offering of her son, and they girded themselves, and at once all greedily stretched forth their right hands and mangled with the sword his marvelling breast, and made common oath in impious joy upon
—
—
;
the living blood, while the new ghost hovers about his mother. What horror struck my limbs when I beheld so dire a sight What colour came upon my cheeks As when a deer is surrounded by savage wolves, and no strength is left in her tender breast and scanty confidence in speed of foot, she darts away in fearful flight, and each moment believes that she is taken, and hears behind her the snap of baffled jaws. " They were come, and already the keels grated on the edge of the strand, and they leap ashore in !
!
emulous haste. Unhappy they, whom their stark valour 'neath Odrysian Mars'' destroyed not, nor the rage of the intervening sea And now they fill with smoke of incense the high shrines of the gods, and drag their promised victims but murky is the fire on every altar, and in no entrails breathes !
;
'
i.e.,
Proserpine.
'
i.e.,
in
Thracian warfare. 15
STATIUS tardius umenti noctem deiecit Olympo luppiter et versum miti, reor, aethera cura sustinuit, dum fata vetat, nee longius umquam cessavere novae perfecto sole tenebrae. 180 sera tamen mundo venerunt astra, sed illis et Paros et nemorosa Thasos crebraeque relucent Cyclades ; una gravi penitus latet obruta caelo
LemnoSjin hanc tristes nebulae, etplaga caeca superne una vagis Lemnos non agnita nautis. 185 iam domibus fusi et nemorum per opaca sacrorum ditibus indulgent epulis vacuantque profundo aurum immane mero, dum quae per Strymona pugnae, texitur,
Rhodope gelidove labor sudatus in Haemo, nee non, manus impia, nuptae 190 serta inter festasque dapes quo maxima cultu quaeque iacent dederat mites Cytherea suprema nocte viros longoque brevem post tempore pacem nequiquam et miseros perituro adflaverat igni. quis
enumerare vacat. ;
195 conticuere chori, dapibus ludoque licenti fit modus et primae decrescunt murmura noctis, cum consanguinei mixtus caligine Leti rore madens Stygio morituram amplectitur urbem Somnus et implacido^ fundit gravia otia cornu secernitque viros. vigilant nuptaeque nurusque 200
acuunt fera tela Sorores. invasere nefas, cuncto sua regnat Erinys pectore. non aliter Scythicos armenta per agros Hyrcanae clausere leae, quas exigit ortu in scelus, atque hilares
^
implacido Pco
The god shows
:
implicito iV.
his will in the yet living ("spirat") speaks in the cry of birds; to be favourmust be perfect ("integer"), and every slight imperfection was given some meaning by the " harus"
entrails, just as he able the entrails
pices."
16
THEBAID,
V. 177-204
the god unimpaired." Slowly did Jupiter bring down the night from moist Olympus, and with kindly care held back, I ween, the turning sky, and stayed the fates, nor ever, the sun's course finished, did the new shadows longer delay their coming. Yet at last the late stars shone in heaven, but their light fell on Paros and woody Thasos and the myriad Cyclades Lemnos alone lies under a heavy sky's thick pall of darkness, gloomv fogs descend upon it and above is a woven belt of night, alone is Lemnos unmarked of wandering mariners. And now, streaming forth from their homes and through the shade of sacred groves, they sate themselves in sumptuous feasting and drain vast golden goblets of the brimming wine, and tell at their leisure of battles on the Strymon, of sweat of war on Rhodope or frozen Haemus. Nay more, their wives, unnatural consorts, recline among the garlands and by the festal tables, each in her choicest raiment on that last night Cytherea had made their husbands gracious toward them, and given a brief moment of vain bliss after so long a time, and breathed into the doomed ones a passion soon to perish. :
;
"
The
choirs fell silent, a
and amorous
sport,
and
term
as night
set to banqueting deepens the noises
is
when Sleep, shrouded in the gloom of his Death and dripping with Stygian dew, enfolds the doomed city, and from his relentless horn pours hea\y drowse, and marks out the men. Wives and daughters are awake for murder, and die away,
brother
joyously do the Sisters sharpen their savage weapons. They fall to their horrid work in the breast of each her Fury reigns. Not otherwise on Scythian plains are cattle surrounded by Hyrcanian lionesses, whom :
VOL.
n
c
17
STATIUS prima fames, avidique implorant ubera nati. quos tibi nam, dubito, scelerum de mille figuris expediam casus. ^ Elymum temeraria Gorge evinctum ramis altaque in mole tapetum efflantem somno crescentia vina superstans vulnera disiecta rimatur veste, sed ilium infelix sopor
admota sub morte
205
210
refugit.
turbidus incertumque oculis vigilantibus hostem occupat amplexu, nee segnius ilia tenentis pone adigit costas, donee sua pectora ferro tangeret. is demum sceleri modus ora supinat 215 blandus adhuc oculisque tremens et murmure Gorgen quaerit et indigno non solvit* bracchia collo. non ego nunc volgi quamquam crudelia pandam funera, sed propria luctus de stirpe recordor ;
:
quod
te, flave
Cydon, quod te per
colla refusis
220
intactum, Crenaee, comis, quibus ubera mecum obliquumque a patre genus, fortemque, timebam quem desponsa, Gyan vidi lapsare cruentae vulnere Myrmidones, quodque inter serta torosque barbara ludentem fodiebat Epopea mater. 225 flet super aequaevum soror exarmata Lycaste Cydimon, heu similes perituro in corpore vultus aspiciens floremque genae et quas finxerat auro ipsa comas, cum saeva parens iam coniuge fuso adstitit impellitque minis atque ingerit* ensem. 230 ut fera, quae rabiem placido desueta magistro ^
Other edd. read (nam dubito) . casus ^ non solvit Pw solvit sua ^V. * ingerit P (in margin) inserit Pw. .
.
:
:
"
18
For similar scenes see
x.
273
sq.
?
— THEBAID,
v. 205-231
hunger drives forth at sunrise and greedy cubs implore for their udders' milk. Of a thousand shapes of guilt I hesitate what to tell thee that befell." Bold Gorge stands over chaplet-crowned Elymus. who on high-piled cushions pants out in his sleep the rising fumes of wine, and probes in his disordered garments for a vital blow, but his ill-omened slumber flees from him at the near approach of death. Confused and half- awake he seizes his foe in his embrace, and she, as he holds her, straightway stabs through his side from, behind, till the point touches her own breast. There at last the crime had ending his head falls back, but still with quivering eyes and murmur of endearing words he seeks for Gorge, nor looses his arms from her unworthy neck. I ^\^ll not now tell of the slaughter of the multitude, cruel as it was, but I will recall the woes of my own family how I beheld thee, fair-haired Cydon, and thee, Crenaeus, with thy unshorn locks streaming o'er thy shoulders— my foster-brothers these, born of another sire and brave Gyas, my betrothed, of whom I stood in awe, all fallen beneath the blow of bloodthirstv Myrmidone ; and how his savage mother pierced Epopeus as he played among the garlands and the couches, Lycaste, her weapon flung away, is weeping over Cydimus, her brother of equal years, gazing alas upon his doomed body, his face so like her own, the bloom upon his cheeks and that hair which she herself had decked in gold, when her cruel mother, her spouse already slain, stands over her, and threatening drives her to the deed, and thrusts the sword upon her. Like a wild beast, that under a soothing master has unlearnt its madness :
:
!
19
STATIUS arma movet stimulisque
tardius in
mores negat
incidit
et verbere crebro
ire suos, sic ilia iacenti
undantemque
sinu conlapsa cruorem
excipit et laceros premit in nova vulnera crines.
235
etiamnum in murmure truncos ferre patris vultus et egentem sanguinis ensem conspexi, riguere comae atque in viscera saevus horror iit meus ille Thoas, mea dira videri ut vero Alcimeden
:
dextra mihi inferor,
!
ille
extemplo thalamis turbata paternis 240
quidem dudum
—
— quis magna tuenti
somnus ? agit versans secum, etsi lata recessit urbe domus, quinam strepitus, quae murmura nocti'^, cur fremibunda quies ? trepido scelus ordine pando, 245 quis dolor, unde animi vis nulla arcere furentes hac sequere, o miserande premunt aderuntque mo'
:
;
;
ranti,
et
mecum
fortasse cades.'
erexit stratis. urbis et
his
motus
et artus
ferimur per devia vastae
ingentem nocturnae caedis acervum
passim, ut quosque sacris crudelis vespera lucis straverat, occulta speculamur
nube
250
latentes.
hie impressa toris ora exstantesque reclusis
pectoribus capulos
magnarum
et fragmina trunca
hastarum et ferro laceras per corpora vestes, crateras pronos epulasque in caede natantes
cernere erat, iugulisque
modo
255
torrentis apertis
sanguine permixto redeuntem in pocula Bacchum. hie
20
iuvenum manus
et nullis violabilis armis
THEBAID,
V. 232-258
and is slow to make attack, and in spite of goadings and many a blow refuses to assume its native temper, so she falls upon him as he lies, and sinking down gatliers the welling blood in her bosom, and staunclies the fresh wounds with her torn tresses. But when I beheld Alcimede carry her father's head still murmuring and his bloodless sword, my hair stood erect and fierce shuddering horror swept through my frame that was my Thoas, methought, and that my own dread hand Straightway in agony I rush to my father's chamber. He indeed long while had pondered what sleep for him whose ;
!
—
—
charge is great } although our spacious home lay apart from the city, what was the uproar, what the noises of the night, why the hours of rest were clamorous. I tell a confused story of the crime,
what was
their grievance, whence their passionate force can stop their frenzy ; follow this way, unhappy one they are pursuing, and ^^ill be on us if we linger, and perchance we shall fall together.' Alarmed by my words he sprang up
wrath.
'
No
;
from the couch.
We
hurry through devious paths of the vast city, and, shrouded in a covering of mist, everywhere behold great heaps of nocturnal carnage, wheresoe'er throughout the sacred groves the cruel darkness had laid them low. Here could one see faces pressed down upon the couches, and swordhilts projecting from breasts laid open, broken fragments of great spears and bodies with raiment gashed and torn, mixing-bowls upset and banquets floating in gore, and mingled wine and blood streaming back like a torrent to the goblets from gaping throats. Here are a band of youths, and there old men whom no violence should profane, and children 21
STATIUS turba senes, positique patrum super ora gementum 260 semincccs pueri trepidas in limitie vitae singultant animas. gelida non saevius Ossa luxuriant Lapitharuni epulae, si quando profundo Nubigenae caluere mero ; vix primus ab ira pallor, et impulsis surgunt ad proelia mensis. Tunc primum sese trepidis sub nocte Thyoneus 265 detexit, nato portans extrema Thoanti
multa subitus cum luce refulsit. non ille quidem turgentia sertis tempora nee flava crinem destrinxerat uva 270 nubilus indignumque oculis liquentibus imbrem adloquitur " dum fata dabant tibi, nate, potentem Lemnon et externis etiam servare timendam gentibus, baud umquam iusto mea cura labori
subsidia, et
adgnovi
:
:
:
absciderunt tristes crudelia Parcae 275 stamina, nee dictis, supplex quae plurima fudi ante lovem frustra, lacrimisque avertere luctus infandum natae concessit honorem. contigit adcelerate fugam, tuque, o mea digna propago, hac rege, virgo, patrem, gemini qua bracchia muri 280 ilia, qua rere^ silentia, porta litus eunt stat funesta Venus ferroque accincta furentes adiuvat unde manus, unde haec Mavortia divae tu lato patrem committe profundo. pectora ? succedam curis." ita fatus in aera rursus 285 solvitur et nostrum, visus arcentibus umbris, mitis iter longae claravit limite flammae. destitit
:
;
:
— —
:
^
rere
P
:
rara w.
" The Centaurs ; the epithet is sometimes explained by regarding them as a personification of mountain-torrents ;
cf.
22
Theb.
i.
365.
THEBAID,
V. 259-286
half-slain flung o'er the faces of their moaning parents and gasping out their trembling souls on the threshold of life. No fiercer are the banquetrevellings of the Lapithae on frozen Ossa, when the cloud-born ones " grow hot with wine deep-drained ; scarce has wrath's first pallor seized them, when overthrowing their tables they start up to the affray. " Then first Thyoneus ^ beneath night's cover revealed himself to us in our distress, succouring his son Thoas in his hour of need, and shone in a sudden blaze of light. I knew him yet he had bound no chaplets round his swelling temples, nor yellow grapes about his hair but a cloud was upon him, and his eyes streamed angry rain as he addressed us While the fates granted thee, my son, to keep Lemnos mighty and feared still by foreign peoples, never failed I to aid thy righteous labours ; the stern Parcae have cut short the relentless threads, nor have my prayers and tears, poured forth in vain supplication before Jove, availed to turn away this :
:
'
:
woe ; to his daughter hath he granted honour unspeakable.'^ Hasten ye then your flight, and thou, maiden, worthy offspring of my race, guide thy sire
way where the wall's twin arms approach the sea ; at yonder gate, where thou thinkest all is quiet, stands Venus in fell mood and aids the furious ones ; whence hath the goddess this violence, this heart of Mars ? Trust thou thy father to the broad deep 1 will take thy cares upon me.' So speaking he faded into air again, and since the shadows barred our vision lit up our road with a long stream of fire, this
—
:
"
Bacchus.
to Venus, to whom he has granted the awful privilege of destroying the Lemnians. *
i.e.,
23
STATIUS dein curvo robore clausum Ventisque et Cycladas Aegaeoni amplexo commendo patrem, ncc fletibus umquam
qua data
signa, sequor
;
dis pelagi
modus alternis, ni iam dimittat Eoo Lucifer astra polo, tunc demum litore rauco multa metu reputans et vix confisa Lyaeo dividor, ipsa gradu nitente, sed anxia retro pectora, nee requies, quin et surgentia caelo flamina et e cunctis prospectem collibus undas. exoritur pudibunda dies, caelumque retexens aversum Lemno iubar et declinia Titan opposita iuga nube refert. patuere furores nocturni, lucisque novae formidine cunctis, fit^
quamquam inter similes, subitus^ pudor
290
295
impia terrae infodiunt scelera aut festinis ignibus urunt. 301 iam manus Eumenidum captasque refugerat arces exsaturata Venus licuit sentire, quid ausae, et turbare comas et lumina tingere fletu. insula dives agris opibusque armisque virisque, 305 nota situ et Getico nuper ditata triumpho, non maris incursu, non hoste, nee aethere laevo perdidit una omnes orbata excisaque fundo^ indigenas non arva viri, non aequora vertunt, conticuere domus, cruor altus et oblita crasso 310 cuncta rubent tabo, magnaeque in moenibus urbis nos tantum et saevi spirant per culmina manes, ipsa quoque arcanis tecti in penetralibus alto molior igne pyram, sceptrum super armaque patris inicio et notas regum velamina vestes, 315 ;
;
:
^ fit Pa; sit Gronovius. subitus Bentley habitus Pw. fundo Bentley ( from a ms.) : mundo Pw. :
^
'
24
:
THEBAID,
V. 287-315
I follow where the signal leads, and anon entrust my sire, hidden in a vessel's curving beams, to the gods of the sen and the winds and Aegaeon who holds the Cyclades in his embrace nor set we any limit to our mutual grief, were it not that Lucifer is already chasing the stars from the eastern pole. Then at last I leave the sounding shore, in brooding fear and scarce trusting Lvaeus'
in kindly succour.
;
word, resolute in step but casting anxious thoughts behind me nor rest I but must fain watch from ever\' hill the breezes rising in heaven and the ocean waves. Day rises shamefast, and Titan opening heaven to view turns aside his beams from Lemnos and hides his averted chariot behind the barrier of a cloud. Night's frenzied deeds lay manifest, and to all the new terrors of the day brought sudden shame, though all had share therein thev bury in the earth their impious crimes or burn with hurried ;
;
And now
the Fury band and ^'enus sated to now could the women know what they had dared, now rend their hair and bedew their eyes with tears. This island, blest in lands and wealth, in arms and heroes, famed for its site and enriched of late by a Getic triumph, has lost, not by onslaught of the sea or of the foe or by stroke of heaven, all her folk together, bereft and ravaged to the uttermost. No men are left to plough the fields or cleave the waves, silent are the homes, swimming deep in blood and stained red v\ith clotted gore we alone remain in that great city, we and the ghosts that fiercely hiss about our rooftops. I, too, in the inner courtyard of my house build high a flaming pile and cast thereon my father's sceptre and arms and well-known royal
fires.
the
full
had
fled the stricken city
;
:
25
—
— STATIUS
rogum confusis ignibus adsto ense cruentato, fraudenique et inania busta plango metu, si forte premant, cassumque parent! omen et hac dubios Icti precor ire timores. his niihi pro nieritis, ut falsi criminis astu 320 parta fides, regna^ et solio considere patris supplicium datur. anne illis obsessa negarem ? ac prope macsta
!
—
saepe ante decs testata fidemque immeritasque manus subeo pro dira potestas exsangue imperium et maestam sine culmine Lemnon. iam magis atque magis vigiles dolor angere sensus, et gemitus clari, et paulatim invisa Polyxo, 327 iam meminisse nefas, iam ponere manibus aras accessi,
—
;
!
concessum et multum cineres iurare sepultos. sic ubi ductorem trepidae stabulique maritum, 330 quem penes et saltus et adultae gloria gentis, Massylo frangi stupuere sub hoste iuvencae, it truncum sine honore pecus, regemque peremptuni ipse ager, ipsi amnes et muta armenta queruntur, Ecce autem aerata dispellens aequora prora 335 Pelias intacti late subit hospita ponti
agunt Minyae, geminus fragor ardua canet per latera, abruptam credas radicibus ire Ortygiam aut fraetum pelago decurrere montem. ast ubi suspensis siluerunt aequora tonsis, 340 mitior et senibus cygnis et pectine Phoebi pinus
;
^
«
regna
P
:
regno
fear lest they suspect the fraud, and not be an evil omen to her father, and that
prays that it may she may escape death. i.e., a lion, often called Massylian, ''
^26
a;.
She weeps from
i.e.,
African.
THEBAID,
V. 316-341
raiment, and sadly do I stand by the blazing welter of the pyre with blood-stained sword, and lament the feigned deed and empty funeral in fear, should they perehanee accuse me, and pray that the omen may be void of harm towards my sire and that so my doubting fears of death may come to nought." For these deserts since the ruse of my pretended crime wins credence the throne and kingdom of my Was I father are given me punishment indeed to deny their urgent pressure ? I submitted, having oft called heaven to v^^itness my innocence and to give protection I succeed ah ghastly sovereignty to power's pale image and to a Lemnos sad without its chief. And now ever more and more do they writhe in wakeful anguish, now openly lament, and little by little grow to hate Polyxo ; now is it permitted to remember the crime, and to set altars to the dead and adjure with many prayers their buried ashes. Even so when the frightened heifers behold in horror their leader and sire of the stall, to whom belonged the pastures and the glory of the grown herd, lying mangled beneath the Massylian foe,* leaderless and dejected goes the herd, and the ver}' fields and rivers with the mute cattle mourn the monarch slain. '• But lo dividing the waters with brazen prow the Pelian pinewood bark draws nigh, stranger to that wide unadventured sea the Minyae are her crew the twofold splashing wave runs white along her towering sides one would think Ortygia moved uprooted or a sundered mountain sailed upon the deep. But when the oars stayed poised in air and the waters fell silent, there came from the vessel's midst a voice sweeter than dying swans or quill of
— — —
—
;
—
I
I
!
:
;
:
27
STATIUS vox media de puppe venit, maria ipsa carinae accedunt. post nosse datum est Oeagrius illic acclinis malo mediis intersonat Orpheus :
remigiis tantosque iubet nescire labores. illis in Scytliicum Borean iter oraque primi Cyaneis artata maris, nos Thracia visu bella ratae vario tecta incursare tumultu,
345
densarum pecudum aut fugientum more volucrum. heu ubi nunc furiae ? portus amplexaque litus 350 moenia, qua longe pelago despectus aperto, scandimus et celsas turres hue saxa sudesque armaque maesta virum atque infectos caedibus enses subvectant trepidae quin et squalentia texta thoracum et voltu galeas intrare soluto 355 non pudet audaces rubuit mirata catervas Pallas, et averso risit Gradivus in Haemo. tunc primum ex animis praeceps amentia cessit, nee ratis ilia salo, sed divum sera per aequor iustitia et poenae scelerum adventare videntur. 360 iamque aberant terris, quantum Cortynia currunt spicula, caeruleo gravidam cum luppiter imbri ipsa super nubem ratis arm amenta Pelasgae sistit agens inde horror aquis, et raptus ab omni ;
;
;
;
sole dies miscet tenebras, quis protinus
unda
concolor obnixi lacerant cava nubila venti diripiuntque fretum, nigris redit umida tellus verticibus, totumque notis certantibus^ aequor pendet et arquato iamiam prope sidera dorso frangitur, incertae nee iam prior impetus alno,
30.1
;
^
certantibus
P
:
portantibus w,
v.
i.
370
293.
arrows, for which Crete was famous. " all the ^ This phrase can be explained by inversion, sunlight taken from the day," or by translating " dies " as " light " (c/. 421), with hypallage of " omni." "
28
Cretan,
i.e.,
37#
THEBAID,
V. 342-270
Phoebus, and the seas themselves drew nigh the Thereafter did we learn 'twas Orpheus, son of Oeagrus, who leaning against the mast sang thus amid the rowers and bade them know such toils no more. Towards Scythian Boreas were they voyaging and the mouth of the unattempted sea that the Cyanean rocks hold fast. We at the sight of them deemed them Thracian foes, and ran to our homes in wild confusion like crowding cattle or fluttering birds. Alas where now is our frenzied rage We man the harbour and the shore-embracing walls, which give a far \iew over the open sea, and the lofty towers hither in excited haste they bring ship.
.'
!
;
stones and stakes and the arms that mourn their lords, and swords stained with slaughter nay, it shames ;
them not
woven corselets and to fit helms about their wanton faces Pallas blushed and marvelled at their bold array, and Gradivus laughed on the far slopes of Haemus. Then first did our headlong madness leave our minds, nor seemed it a mere ship on the salt sea, but the gods' late-coming justice and vengeance for our crimes that drew nigh o'er the deep. And already were they distant from to
don
stiff
;
the land the range of a Gortynian" shaft, when Jupiter brought a cloud laden with dark rain and set it over the very^ rigging of the Pelasgian ship then the waters shudder, all its light is stolen from the sun ^ and the gloom thickens, and the wave straightway takes the colour of the gloom ; warring winds tear the hollow clouds and rend the deep, the wet sand surges up in the black eddies, and the whole sea hangs poised between the conflict of the winds, and with arching ridge now all but touching the stars falls shattered ; nor has the bewildered ;
29
-
—
STATIUS sed labat exstantem rostris
modo
gurgite in imo,
nunc caelo Tritona ferens. nee roboi-a prosunt semideiim heroum, puppemque insana flagellat arbor et instabili procumbens pondere eurvas raptat aquas, remique cadunt in pectus inanes. 375 nos quoque per rupes murorumque aggere ab omni,
dum
labor ille wis fretaque indignantur et austros, desuper invalidis fluitantia tela lacertis quid non ausa manus ? Telamona et Pelea contra spargimus, et nostro petitur Tirynthius arcu. 380
—
—
illi
—quippe simul bello pelagoque laborant
pai-s clipeis
egerere
munire ratem, pars aequora fundo
asfc alii
;
pugnant, sed inertia motu
corpora, suspensaeque carent conamine vires,
instamus iactu telorum, et ferrea nimbis
385
certat hiemps, vastaeque sudes fractique molares
spiculaque et multa crinitum missile flamma
nunc pelago, nunc puppe cadunt, dat operta fragorem regemunt tabulata cavernis. talis Hyperborea viridis nive verberat agros 390 luppiter obruitur campis genus omne ferarum, deprensaeque cadunt volucres, et messis amaro strata gelu, fragor inde iugis, inde amnibus irae. ut vero elisit nubes love tortus ab alto
pinus, et abiunctis
;
ignis et ingentes patuere in fulmine nautae,
deriguere animi, manibusque horrore remissis
arma "
aliena cadunt, rediit in pectora sexus.
For *
30
this i.e.,
meaning of " flagello " cf. ill. 36, x. 169. so that they act as a sort of bulwark.
395
THEBAID,
V. 371-397
and fro, with the Triton on its bows now projecting from the waters' depths, now borne aloft in air. Nor aught avails the might of the heroes half-divine, but the demented mast makes the vessel rock and sway," and falling forward ^vith overbalancing weight smites upon the arching waves, and the oars drop fruitlessly on the rowers' chests. We, too, from rocks and every walled rampart, while they thus toil and rage against the seas and the southern blasts, with weak vessel its former motion, but pitches to
—
arms shower down wavering missiles what deed we not dare ? on Telamon and Peleus, and even on the Tirynthian we bend our bow. But they, hard pressed both by storm and foe, fortify, some of them, the ship with shields,'' others bale water from the hold others fight, but the motion makes their bodies helpless, and there is no force behind their reehng blows. We hurl our darts more fiercely, and the iron rain \ies -vsith the tempest, and enormous stakes and fragments of millstones and javehns and missiles trailing tresses of flame fall now the decking of the into the sea, now on the vessel bark resounds and the beams groan as the gaping holes are torn. Even so does Jupiter lash the green beasts of all kinds fields ^^ith Hj'perborean snow perish on the plains, and birds are overtaken and fall dead, and the harvest is blasted with untimely frost then is there thundering on the heights, and fury in the rivers. But when from on high Jove flung his brand with shock of cloud on cloud, and the flash revealed the mariners' mighty forms, our hearts were frozen fast, our arms dropped shuddering and let fall the unnatural weapons, and our true sex once more held sway. We behold the
—
did
;
:
;
;
31
STATIUS cernimus Aeacidas murisque immane minantem Ancaeum et longa pellentem cuspide rupes Iphiton attonito manifestus in agmine supra est 400 Amphitryoniades puppemque alternus utrimque ingravat et medias ardet descendere in undas. at levis et miserae nondum mihi notus lason transtra per et remos impressaque terga vironim nunc magnum Oeniden, nunc ille hortatibus Idan 405 et Talaum et cana rorantem aspargine ponti Tyndariden iterans gelidique in nube parentis vela laborantem^ Calain subnectere malo voce manuque rogat quatiunt impulsibus illi nunc freta, nunc muros, sed nee spumantia cedunt 410 aequora, et incussae redeunt a turribus hastae. ;
;
ipse graves fluctus
clavumque audire negantem
agens Tiphys palletque et plurima mutat imperia ac laevas dextrasque obtorquet in undas lassat
proram navifragis avidam concurrere saxis, donee ab extremae cuneo ratis Aesone natus Palladios oleae, Mopsi gestamina, ramos
415
extulit et socium turba prohibente poposcit foedera praecipites vocem involvere procellae. tunc modus armorum, pariterque exhausta quierunt flamina, confusoque dies respexit Olympo. 421 quinquaginta illi, trabibus de more revinctis, eminus abrupto quatiunt nova litora saltu, magnorum decora alta patrum, iam fronte sereni noscendique habitUjpostquamtumor^iraquecessit 425 ;
^
laborantem ^
" i.e.. "
32
Pw
:
laboranti Bentley.
tumor Bentley
Castor or Pollux.
:
timor Pu.
*
i.e.,
Apparently a reminiscence of Aen.
Boreas.
vi. init.
THEBAID,
V. 398-425
sons of Aeacus, and Ancaeus threatening mightily our walls, and Iphitus with long spear warding off the rocks ; clear to \'iew among the desperate band the son of Amphitryon outtops them all, and alternately on either hand weighs down the ship and burns to leap into the midst of the waves. But Jason not yet did I know him to my cost leaping nimbly over benches and oars and treading the backs of heroes, calls now on great Oenides, now on Idas and Talaus, now on the son of Tyndareus" dripping with the white spume of the sea, and Calais stri\ing aloft in the clouds of his frosty sire ^ to fasten the sails to the mast, and with voice and gesture again and again encourages them. With vigorous strokes they lash the sea and shake the walls, but none the more do the foaming waters yield, and the flung spears rebound from our towers. Tiphys himself wearies by his labours the hea\y billows and the tiller that will not hear him, and pale with anxiety oft changes his commands, and turns right- and leftward from the land the prow that would fain dash itself to shipwreck on the rocks, until from the vessel's tapering bows the son of Aeson holds forth the ohve-branch of Pallas that Mopsus bore, and though the tumult of his comrades would prevent him, asks for peace his words were swept away by the headlong gale. Then came there a truce to arms, and the tempest hkewise sank to rest, and day looked forth once more from the turbid heaven. Then those fifty heroes, their vessels duly moored," as they leap from the sheer height shake the stranger shores, tall comely sons of glorious sires, serene of brow and known by their bearings, now that the swelhng rage has left their countenances. Even so
—
—
;
VOL.
II
D
33
STATIUS sic fama erumpere porta quando domos litusque rubentum Aethiopum et mensas amor est intrare^ minores dant Fluvii Montesque locum, turn Terra superbit 430 gressibus et paulum respirat caelifer Atlans. Hie et ab adserto nuper Marathone superbum Thesea et Ismarios, Aquilonia pignora, fratres, utraque quis rutila stridebant tempora pinna, cernimus, hie Phoebo non indignante priorem Admetum et durae similem nihil Orphea Thracae, 435 tunc prolem Calydone satam generumque profundi Nereos. ambiguo visus errore lacessunt
vultibus.
arcana
caelicolas,
si
;
Oebalidae gemini
ambo
chlamys huic, chlamys ardet et illi, umeros exsertus uterque,
;
hastile gerunt,
nudus uterque genas, simili coma fulgurat astro. 440 audet iter magnique sequens vestigia mutat Herculis et tarda quamvis se mole ferentem vix cursu tener aequat Hylas Lernaeaque tollens arma sub ingenti gaudet sudare pharetra. Ergo iterum Venus et tacitis corda aspera flammis Lemniadum pertemptat Amor, tunc regia luno 446 arma habitusque virum pulchraeque insignia gentis mentibus insinuat, certatimque ordine cunctae hospitibus patuere fores tunc primus in aris 450 ignis, et infandis venere oblivia curis ;
;
tunc epulae felixque sopor noctesque quietae, ^
intrare
Pw
:
epulatur Jupiter
Schroder, cf. Lactantius frequenter frequenter eos revisunt.
iterare .
.
.
Homer
describes the gods as visiting the Aethiopians (//. i. 423). One of the exploits of Tlieseus was to slay a wild bull that ravaged the fields of Marathon. ' i.e., Thracian, Northern, sons of the north wind. "
and banqueting with them *
34
"
THEBAID,
V. 426^51
the denizens of heaven are said to burst forth from their mystic portals, when they desire to lasit the homes and the coast and the lesser banquet of the red Aethiopians " rivers and mountains yield them passage, Earth exults beneath their footsteps and Atlas knows a brief respite from the burden of the :
sky. " Here
we behold Theseus,
come in triumph and the Ismarian brethren, pledges of the North Wind's love, with red >A-ing-feathers whirring loud on either temple here, too, Admetus, whom Phoebus was content to serve, and Orpheus, in nought resembling barbarous Thrace then Calydon's offspring and the son-in-law of watery Nereus. The twin Oebalidae ^ bewilder
from setting Marathon
lately
free,*
;
;
our vision ^vith puzzling error each wears a bright red mantle and wields a spear, bare are the shoulders of each and their faces yet unbearded, their locks are aglow with the same starry radiance. Young Hylas bravely marching follows great Hercules :
stride
for
stride,
though he bear
scarce
equalling his pace, slow-
mighty bulk, and rejoices to carry the Lemaean arms and to sweat beneath the huge quiver. "So once more \'enus and Love try with their his
secret fires the fierce hearts of the Lemnian women. Then royal Juno instils into their minds the image of the heroes' arms and raiment, and their signs of noble race, and all fling open their doors in emulous welcome to the strangers. Then first were fires lit on the altars, and unspeakable cares were forgotten, then came feasting and happy sleep and tranquil Castor and Pollux king of Sparta. ''
;
Oebalus was
their grandfather,
a
35
STATIUS nee superum sine mente, reor, placuere fatentes.
fatum excusabile culpae
forsitan et nostrae
cineres furiasque
noscere cura, duces, testor
:
meorum
ut externas non sponte aut crimine taedas 455
attigerim
—
scit
cura
deum
—
virginibus dare vincla novis
Phasin habent
;
blandus lason
etsi
:
alios, Colchi,
sua iura cruentum generatis amores.
iamque exuta gelu tepuerunt sidera
longis
solibus, et velox in terga revolvitur annus.
460
iam nova progenies partusque in vota soluti, et non speratis clamatur Lemnos alumnis. nee non ipsa tamen thalami monimenta coacti enitor geminos, duroque sub hospite mater 465 nomen avi renovo nee quae fortuna relictis nosse datur, iam plena quater quinquennia pergunt, ;
modo fata sinunt aluitque rogata Lycaste. Detumuere animi- maris, et clementior Auster vela vocat ratis ipsa moram portusque quietos si
:
odit et adversi^ tendit retinacula saxi.
470
inde fugam Minyae, sociosque appellat lason efFerus,
o utinam iam tunc
mea
litora rectis
praetervectus aquis, cui non sua pignora cordi,
non promissa gentibus
:
fides
;
certe stat
fama remotis
aequorei redierunt vellera Phrixi.
ut stata lux pelago venturumque aethera sensit
Tiphys et occidui rubuere cubilia Phoebi, ^
36
adversi
P
:
adsueti w
:
asserti
D.
475
THEBAID,
V. 452-477
nights, nor without heaven's will, I ween, did they find favour, when they confessed their crime. fault, too, fated pardonable fault, perchance ye would hear, chieftains by the ashes and avenging
My
my O of my people
:
swear, innocent and unwilling did I hght the torch of alien wedlock as Heaven's Providence doth know though Jason be wily to ensnare young maidens' hearts laws of its own bind blood-stained Phasis, and you, ye Colchians, breed far different passions. And now the skies have broken through the bonds of frost and grow warm in the long sunlit days, and the swift year has wheeled round to the opposite pole. newprogeny is brought to birth in answer to our prayers, and Lemnos is filled with the cries of babes unhoped-for. I myself also bear twin sons, memorial of a ra\ished couch, and, made a mother by my rough guest, renew in the babe his grandsire's name nor may I know what fortune hath befallen since I left them, for now full twenty years are past, if the fates but suffer them to live and Lycaste reared furies
I
—
—
:
A
;
them
as I
"The
prayed her.
fell tranquil and a milder southern breeze invites the sails the ship herself, hating to tarry in the quiet haven, strains with her hawsers at the resisting rock. Then would the Minyae fain begone, and cruel Jason summons his comrades would he had ere that sailed past my shores, who recked not of his own children, nor of
boisterous seas
:
—
his
sworn word
lands
;
truly his
fame
is
known
in distant
the fleece of seafaring Phrixus hath returned. When the destined sun had sunk beneath the sea and Tiphys felt the coming breeze and Phoebus' western couch blushed red, once more alas there :
!
37
STATIUS heu iterum gemitus, iterumque novissima nox iam rate celsus lason ire iubet, primoque ferit dux verbere pontum. illos e scopulis et sunimo vertice montis
est.
vix reserata dies, et
spumea
480
porrecti dirimentes terga profundi
prosequimur
visu, donee lassavit euntes lux oculos longumque polo contexere visa est
aequor et extremi pressit freta margine
Fama
subit portus,
vectum trans
alta
485
caeli.
Thoanta
fraterna regnare Chic, mihi crimina nulla, et vacuos arsisse rogos freniit impia plebes, sontibus accensae stimulis facinusque reposcunt. ;
quin etiam occultae vulgo increbrescere voces " solane fida suis, nos autem in funera laetae^
:
490
?
non deus haec fatumque
? quid imperat urbe ne" fanda ? talibus exanimis dictis et triste propinquat supplicium, nee regna iuvant vaga litora furtim 495 incomitata sequor funestaque moenia linquo, qua fuga nota patris sed non iterum obvius Euhan, nam me praedonum manus hue adpulsa tacentem^
—
—
;
famulam transmittit in oras." Talia Lernaeis iterat dum regibus exsul Lemnias et longa solatur damna querella, alumni, immemor absentis ^sic di suasistis abripit et vestras
—
ille ^ "
!
500
—
graves oculos languentiaque ora comanti laetae Pw Garrod conj. nostra autem in funera laeta est ? tacentem Pw : iacentem latentem edd. licentum Oarrod. :
:
" "euntes" expresses the "travelling" of the sight as follows the ships out to sea. " i.e., our deed was ordained by heaven and fate obeying them she is " nefanda."
88
;
it
in dis-
— THEBAID,
V. 478-502
was lamentation, once more the last night of all. Scarce is the day begun, and already Jason high upon the poop gives the word for saiUng, and strikes as chieftain the first oar-stroke on the sea. From rocks and mountain height we follow them with our gaze as they cleave the foamy space of outspread ocean, until the hght wearied our roaming \'ision and seemed to interweave the distant waters with the sky, and made the sea one with heaven's extremest marge. "A rumour goes about the harbour that Thoas has been carried o'er the deep and is reigning in his brother's isle of Chios, that I am innocent and the funeral pyre a mockery the impious mob clamours loud, maddened by the stings of guilt, and demands the crime I owe them. Moreover, secret murmurings arise and increase among the folk Is she alone **
;
'
:
faithful to her kindred, while
Did not heaven and
we
fate ordain the
rejoiced to slay
deed
?
?
why then
bears she rule in the city, the accursed one ? ^ Aghast at such words for a cruel retribution draws nigh, nor does queenly pomp delight me I wander alone in secret on the winding shore and leave the deadly walls by the road of my father's flight, well known to me ; but not a second time did Euhan meet me, for a band of pirates putting in to shore carried me speechless away and brought me to your land a slave." While thus the Lenmian exile recounts her tale to the Lemaean princes and by a long plaint consoles her loss, forgetful so ye gods constrained her of her absent charge,*^ he, with hea\-y eyes and '
—
—
—
'
Le.,
Opheltes, the infant,
!
cf. iv.
742, 787,
39
STATIUS mergit humo, fessusque diu puerilibus actis manus haeret in herba. 505 Interea campis, nemoris sacer horror Achaei, terrigena exoritur serpens, tractuque soluto immanem sese vehit ac post terga relinquit. livida fax oculis, tumidi stat in ore veneni spuma virens, ter lingua vibrat, terna agmina adunci 510 dentis, et auratae crudelis gloria fronti prominet. Inachii^ sanctum dixere Tonanti agrieolae, cui cura loci et silvestribus aris pauper honos nunc ille dei circumdare templa orbe vago labens, miserae nunc robora silvae 515 atterit et vastas tenuat complexibus ornos saepe super fluvios geminae iacet aggere ripae continuus, squamisque incisus adaestuat amnis. sed nunc, Ogygii iussis quando omnis anhelat terra dei trepidaeque latent in pulvere Nymphae, 520 saevior anfractu laterum sinuosa retorquens terga solo siccique nocens furit igne veneni. stagna per arentesque lacus fontesque repressos volvitur et vacuis fluviorum in vallibus errat, incensusque siti^ liquiduni nunc aera lambit 525 ore supinato, nunc arva gementia radens pronus adhaeret humo, si quid viridantia sudent gramina percussae calidis adflatibus herbae, qua tulit ora, cadunt, moriturque ad sibila campus quantus ab Arctois discriminat aethera plaustris Anguis et usque Notos alienumque exit in orbem 530 labitur in somnos, prensa
;
;
;
:
;
^ ^
Inachii Mueller
incensusque
siti
:
Schroder
:
Inachio Poj. incertusque sui Poj.
Bacchus, patron deity of Thebes. have adopted Schrader's emendation
"
i.e.,
*
I
;
" incertusque
sui " seems hardly to justify Klotz's explanation " mentis non compos," i.e., " in a fury."
40
THEBAID,
V. 503-530
drooping head and wearied by his long childish play, sinks to slumber, deep buried in the luxuriant earth, while one hand holds the grass tight-clutched. Meanwhile an earth-born serpent, the accursed terror of the Achaean grove, arises on the mead, and loosely dragging his huge bulk now bears it forward, now leaves it behind him. A li\id gleam is in his eyes, the green spume of foaming poison in his fangs, and a threefold quivering tongue, with three rows of hooked teeth, and a cruel blazonry rises high upon his gilded forehead. The Inachian countrymen held him sacred to the Thunderer, who has the guardianship of the place and the scant worship of the woodland altars and now he glides with trailing coils about the shrines, now grinds the hapless forest oaks ;
and crushes huge ash-trees in his embrace oft lies he in continuous length from bank to bank across the streams, and the river sundered by his scales swells high. But fiercer now, when all the land is panting at the command of the Ogygian god " and the Nymphs are hurrying to the hiding of their dusty beds, he twists his tortuous writhing frame upon the ground, and the fire of his parched venom fills him with a baneful rage. Over pools and arid lakes and stifled springs he winds his way, and wanders in the riverless valleys, and consumed by burning thirst * now flings back his head and laps the liquid air, now brushing ;
o'er the groaning fields cleaves downward to the earth, should there be any sap or moisture in the
grasses ; but the herbage falls stricken by his hot breath, whereso'er he turns his head, and the mead shrivels at the hissing of his jaws vast is he as the Snake that divides the pole from the Northern Wain and passes even unto the Southern winds and an ;
41
;
STATIUS quantus et ille sacri spiris intorta movebat cornua Parnassi, donee tibi, Delie, fixus vexit harundineam centeno volnere silvam. Quis tibi, parve, deus tarn magni pondera fati sorte dedit ? tune hoe vix prima ad limina vitae lioste iaees ? an ut inde sacer per saeeula Grais gentibus et tanto dignus morerere sepulcro ? oeeidis extremae destrietiis verbere eaudae ignaro serpente puer, fugit
535
ilicet artus
somnus, et in solam patuerunt lumina mortem. 540 cum tamen attonito moriens vagitus in auras exeidit et ruptis immutuit ore querellis, qualia non totas peragunt insomnia voces, audiit Hypsipyle, facilemque negantia eursum exanimis genua aegra rapit iam certa malorum 545 mentis ab augurio sparsoque per omnia visu lustrat humum quaerens et nota vocabula parvo nequiquam ingeminans nusquam ille, et prata re;
:
centes amisere notas. viridi piger aeeubat hostis coUectus gyro spatiosaque iugera complet, sic etiam obliqua cervicem expostus in alvo. horruit infelix visu longoque profundum ineendit elamore nemus nee territus ille, sed iaeet. Argolicas ululatus flebilis aures impulit extemplo monitu ducis advolat ardens
550
;
;
555
Areas eques causamque refert. tunc squamea demum torvus ad armorum radios fremitumque virorum eolla movet rapit ingenti conamine saxum, :
" He means the snake (Draco) that winds between the two Bears {cf. Virg. G. i. 244), but his expression is difficult nor does Draco go anywhere near the southern hemisjiherc-
42
I
"
THEBAID,
V. 531-558
he that shook the horns of sacred Parnassus, twining his coils among them, until pierced by a hundred wounds he bore, O Delian, a forest of thy arrows.* What god appointed for thee, little one, the burden of so dire a fate ? Scarce on thy life's earliest tlireshold, art thou slain by such a foe ? Was it that thus thou mightest be sacred for ever to the peoples of Greece and dying merit so glorious a burial ? Thou diest, O babe, struck by the end of the unwitting serpent's tail, and straightway the sleep left thy limbs and thine eyes opened but to death alone. But when thy frightened dying wail rose upon the air and the broken cry fell silent on thy lips, like the half-finished accents of a dream, Hypsipyle heard it and sped with faint and failing limbs and stumbling gait her mind forebodes sure disaster, and with gaze turned to every quarter she scans the ground in search, vainly repeating words the babe would know but he is nowhere, and the recent tracks are vanished from the meadows. Gathered in a green circle lies the sluggish foe and fills many an acre round, so lies he with his head slantwise on his bellv. Struck with horror at the sight the unhappy woman roused the forest's depths with shriek on shriek; yet still he lies unmoved. Her sorrowful wail reached the Argives' ears forthwith the Arcadian knight at his chief's word flies thither in eager haste and reports the cause. Then at last, at the glint of armour and the shouting of the men he rears his scaly neck in wTath with a vast effort tall Hippoalien sky," or as
;
;
:
:
though Statius may have been thinking of either Hydra or Serpens, which do, and confused them somehow with Draco. " Python, slain by Apollo at Delphi. ' Parthenopaeus.
43
STATIUS quo discretus ager, vacuasque impellit in auras arduus Hippomedon, quo turbine bellica quondam 560 librati saliunt portarum in claustra molares. cassa ducis virtus iam mollia colla refusus in tergum serpens venientem evaserat'^ ictum. dat sonitum tellus, nemorumque per avia densi " at non mea vulnera " clamat 565 dissultant nexus. et trabe fraxinea Capaneus subit obvius " umquam :
seu tu pavidi ferus incola luci, utinamque deis, concessa voluptas, non, si consertum super haec mihi membra Giganta subveheres." volat hasta tremens et hiantia monstri ora subit linguaeque seeat fera vincla trisulcae, 571 effugies,
sive deis,
perque iubas stantes capitisque insigne corusci emicat, et nigri sanie perfusa cerebri longus vix tota peregit^ membra dolor, rapido celer ille volumine telum 575 circuit avulsumque ferens in opaca refugit templa dei hie magno tellurem pondere mensus figitur alta^ solo,
;
implorantem animam dominis adsibilat aris. ilium et cognatae stagna indignantia Lernae, adsuetae spargere Nymphae, 580 reptatus ager, lucosque per omnis silvicolae fracta gemuistis harundine, Fauni. ipse etiam e summa iam tela poposcerat aethra luppiter, et dudum nimbique hiemesque coibant, floribus et vernis
et
Nemees
evaserat Barth {from a ifs.), Baehrens exhauserat Pu. ^ alta w : hasta acta Heinsius. ' peregit Pw : peredit Lachmann.
^
:
P
:
" Statius loses no opportunity of hostlHtj' to the gods. *
44
The Giants were
emphasizing Capaneus's
said to have snakes for legs,
cf.
Ov. F.
THEBAID,
V. 559-684
boundary mark of a field, through the empty air ^^ith such a whirlwind do the poised boulders fly forth against the barred gates in time of war. \'ain was the chieftain's might, in a moment had the snake bent back The his supple neck and foiled the coming blow.
medon and
seizes a stone, the
hurls
it
;
earth re-echoes and in the pathless woods the closeknit boughs are rent and torn. " But never shalt thou escape my stroke," cries Capaneus, and makes for him with an ashen spear, "whether thou be the savage inmate of the trembling grove, or a delight granted to the gods ay, would it were to the gods " never even if thou broughtest a Giant to battle with me upon those limbs.^ " The quivering spear flies, and enters the monster's gaping mouth and cleaves the rough fastenings of the triple tongue, then through the upright crest and the adornment of his darting head it issues forth, and fouled with the brain's black gore sinks deep into !
—
—
soil. Scarce has the pain run the length of his whole frame, with lightning speed he twines his coils around the weapon, and tears it out and carries it to his lair in the dark temple of the god there measuring his mighty bulk along the ground he gasps and
the
;
Him did the sorrowing marsh of kindred Lerna mourn, and the N}'mphs who were wont to strew him with vernal flowers, and Nemea's fields whereon he crawled ; ye too, ye woodland Fauns, bewailed him in every grove with broken reeds. Jupiter himself had already called for his weapons from the height of air, and long had clouds and storms been gathering, had not hisses out his life at his patron's shrine.
" mille super haec
V. 37 •'
manus illis dedit et pro cruribus angues." Or membra " may be " over these (slain) limbs." 45
STATIUS minor ira deo gravioraque tela mereri servatus Capaneus moti tamen aura cucurrit fulminis et summas libavit vertice cristas. ni
585
;
lamque liber ut
pererratis infelix
angue
locus,
Lemnia campis,
modico super aggere longe
pallida sanguineis infectas roribus herbas prospicit. hue magno cursum rapit efFera luctu
590
agnoscitque nefas, terraeque inlisa nocenti morem non verba in funere primo, non lacrimas habet ingeminat misera oscula tantum incumbens animaeque fugam per membra tepentem quaerit hians. non ora loco, non pectora restant, 596 rapta cutis, tenuia ossa patent nexusque madentes sanguinis imbre novi, totumque in vulnere corpus, ac velut aligerae sedem fetusque parentis cum piger umbrosa populatus in ilice serpens, 600 ilia redit querulaeque domus mirata quietem iam stupet^ impendens advectosque horrida maesto excutit ore cibos, cum solus in arbore paret sanguis et errantes per capta cubilia plumae. fulminis in
:
Ut laceros artus gremio miseranda recepit 605 intexitque comis, tandem laxata dolori^ vox invenit iter, gemitusque in verba soluti " o mihi desertae natorum dulcis imago, Archemore, o rerum et patriae solamen ademptae servitiique decus, qui te, mea gaudia, sontes 610 exstinxere dei, modo quern digressa reliqui lascivum et prono vexantem gramina cursu ? heu ubi siderei vultus ? ubi verba ligatis :
P
^
46
^ iam stupet : stat super w. dolori Bentley, Heinsius : dolore
Pw.
THEBAID,
V. 585-613
the god allayed his wrath and Capaneus been preserved to merit a direr punishment yet the wind of the stirred thunderbolt sped and swayed the summit of his crested helm. And now the unhappy Lemnian, wandering o'er the fields when the place was rid of the serpent, grows pale to behold on a low mound afar the herbage stained with streams of blood. Thither frantic in her grief she hastens, and recognizing the horror falls as though lightning-struck on the offending earth, nor in the first shock of ruin can find speech or tears to shed she only bends and showers despairing kisses, and breathlessly searches the yet warm limbs for traces of the vanished life. Nor face nor breast remain, the skin is torn away and the frail bones are exposed to view, and the sinews are drenched in fresh streams of blood the whole body ;
;
:
is
one wound.
Even
as
when
in a
shady ilex-tree
a lazy serpent has ravaged the home and brood of a mother bird, she, returning, marvels at the quiet of her clamorous abode, and hovers aghast, and in wild dismay drops from her mouth the food she brings, for there is nought but blood on the tree and feathers shed about the plundered nest. When, poor woman, she had gathered the mangled limbs to her bosom and covered them in her tresses, at length her voice released gave passage to her grief " Archemorus, and her moans melted into words sweet image of my babes in my lonely plight, solace of my woes and exile, and pride of my thraldom, :
what guilty gods have
when
slain thee,
O my
joy,
whom,
parted from thee, I left froUcking and crushing the grasses in thy crawl ? Alas, where is that star-bright face } Where are thy half-formed I lately
4.7
—— STATIUS imperfecta sonis risusque et murmura soli intellecta mihi ? quotiens tibi Lemnon et Argo^ 615 sueta loqui et longa somnum suadere querella sic equidem luctus solabar et ubera parvo iam materna dabam, cui nunc venit inritus orbae lactis et infelix in vulnera liquitur imber. 620 nosco deos o dura mei praesagia somni nocturnique metus, et numquam impune per umbras quos arguo divos ? attonitae mihi visa Venus ipsa ego te quid enim timeam moritura fateri ? exposui fatis. quae mentem insania traxit ? 625 tantane me tantae tenuere oblivia curae ? dum patrios casus famaeque exorsa retracto ambitiosa meae pietas haec magna fidesque !
:
!
—
—
!
Lemne, nefas
ubi letifer anguis, ferte, duces, meriti si qua est mihi gratia duri, si quis honos dictis, aut vos exstinguite ferro, ne tristes dominos orbamque inimica revisam exsolvi tibi,
;
630
Eurydicen, quamquam baud ilU mea cura dolendo hocne ferens onus inlaetabile matris cesserit. transfundam gremio ? quae me prius ima sub umbras mergat humus ? " simul haec terraque et sanguine voltum 635 sordida
magnorum
vertitur, et tacite
Et iam
sacrifici
circa vestigia
regum
maerentibus imputat undas. subitus per tecta Lycurgi
nuntius implerat lacrimis ipsumque domumque, ipsum adventantem Persei vertice sancto ^
Argo Gronovius
:
640
Argos Pw.
" Eurydice, wife of Lycurgus, was the mother of the babe Opheltes, whom Hypsipyle had been nursing. * i.e., blames them for the disaster, of which the stream was the cause, by separating her from the babe.
48
THEBAID,
V. 614-640
words and tongue-tied utterance, those smiles, and mutterings that I alone could understand ? How often used I to talk to thee of Lemnos and the Argo, and For with my long sad tale soothe thee to sleeping so indeed did I console my griefs, and gave the babe a mother's breasts, where now in my bereavement the milk flows in vain and falls in barren drops upon O cruel thy wounds. 'Tis the gods' work, I see ah presage of my dreams and nightly terrors Venus, who never appeared in the darkness to my But why do I blame startled vision but ill befell the gods ? Myself I exposed thee to thy fate for why should I fear to confess, so soon to die ? What !
:
!
!
!
—
me away ? Could I so utterly forget a charge so dear ? While I recount the fortunes of my country and the boastful prelude of my own I have renown what true devotion, what loyalty paid thee, Lemnos, the crime I owed. Take me then, ye princes, to the deadly snake, if ye have any gratitude for the service that has cost so dear, or any respect to my words ; or slay me yourselves with the sword, lest I see again my sorrowing masters and bereaved Eurydice,now made my foe" although I to carry my grief comes not short of hers. this hapless burden and cast it on a mother's lap ? nay, what earth may sooner engulf me in its deepest shades ? " Thereupon, her face befouled with dust and gore, she turns to follow the mighty chieftains, and secretly as they grieve lays the waters to their charge.* And now the news, sweeping sudden through the palace of devout Lycurgus, had brought full measure of tears to himself and all his house— himself, as he drew nigh from the sacred summit of Perseus' moun-
madness carried
—
!
Am
voL.
II
E
—
—
49
STATIUS montis, ubi averse dederat prosecta Tonanti, et caput iratis rediens quassabat hie sese Argolicis
immunem
ab
extis.
servat ab armis
baud animi vaeuus, sed templa araeque tenebant.
needum etiam responsa deum monitusque
vetusti
exciderant voxque ex adytis accepta profundis
645
:
" prima, Lycurge, dabis Dircaeo funera bello."
maestus
id cavet, et
vicini
pulvere Martis
angitur ad lituos periturisque invidet armis.
—
—
laceras comitata Thoantis Ecce fides superum 651 advehit exsequias, contra subit obvia mater, femineos coetus plangentiaque agmina ducens. at non magnanimo pietas ignava Lycurgo fortior ille malis, laerimasque insana resorbet !
:
ira patris, longo rapit arva
"
morantia passu
655
autem ubinam, cui parva cruoris laetave damna mei ? vivitne ? impellite raptam, faxo omnis fabula Lemni ferte citi comites vociferans
:
ilia
;
tumidae generis mendacia sacri exciderint." ibat letumque inferre parabat ense furens rapto venienti Oeneius heros impiger obiecta proturbat pectora parma, et pater et
660
;
ac simul infrendens " siste hunc, vesane, furor em, quisquis es " et pariter Capaneus acerque reducto :
!
adfuit
Hippomedon rectoque Erymanthius
ac iuvenem multo praestringunt lumine ° ">
Cf.
iii.
460
;
"prosecta,"
;
ense,
665
at inde
apparently the same mountain is meant. that which is cut out for ofi'ering, i.e.,
lit.
the entrails. "
Tydeus. " Erymanthian," below
thenopaeus.
50
= Arcadian,
i.e.,
Par-
THEBAID,
V. 641-666
where he had offered sacrifice * to the angry Thunderer, and was shaking his head as he returned from the ill-omened entrails. Here he abides without share in the Argolic war, not lacking in courage, but the temples and the altars kept him back nor had the gods' response and ancient warning yet faded from his mind, nor the words received from the innermost shrine " In the Dircaean war, Lycurgus, the first death shall be thine to give." Of that he is afraid, and, saddened by the dust of neighbouring armies, he is tortured at the trumpets' sound, and envies the doomed hosts. the daughter But lo so the gods keep faith of Thoas accompanies the mangled infant's funeral tain,**
;
:
!
—
I
—
and his mother comes to meet her, leading a band of women and troops of mourners. But not sluggish was the devotion of great-souled Lycurgus grief emboldened him, the father's mad rage thrust back the tears, and with long strides he covers the " Where fields that stay his wTath, and cries aloud train,
:
:
now
who
recks little or is glad of the shedding of my blood ? Lives she ? Then seize her, comrades, and bring her speedily I will make her insolence forget all her tale of Lemnos and her father and her " He advanced and prelies about a race di\ine pared to deal the death-blow, his sword dra\vn in rage but as he came, the Oeneian hero," quick to act, thrust his shield against his breast and barred " Abate thy fury, the way, with stem rebuke madman, whoe'er thou art " and Capaneus likewise is
she,
!
!
;
:
!
and brave Hippomedon, with sword drawn back, and the Erymanthian, with levelled blade, were there to succour, and the prince is dazzled by their flashing swords but on the other side the rustic bands :
51
STATIUS agrestum pro rege manus.
quos inter Adrastus
mitius et sociae veritus commercia vittae^ " ne, quaeso ait absistite ferro, unus avum sanguis, neve indulgete furori, 670 tuque prior." sed non sedato pectore Tydeus " anne dueem servatricemque cohortis subicit Inachiae ingratis coram tot milibus ausus^ mactare in tumulos quanti pro funeris ultor !— 675 cui regnum genitorque Thoas et lucidus Euhan stirpis avus ? timidone parum, quod gentibus actis undique in arma tuis inter rapida agmina pacem solus habes ? habeasque, et te victoria Graium inveniat tumulis etiamnum haec fata gementem." 680 Dixerat, et tandem cunctante modestior ira " equidem non vos ad moenia Thebes ille refert rebar, at^ hostiles hue advenisse catervas.
Amphiaraus
:
!
:
—
:
pergite in exscidium, socii si tanta voluptas sanguinis, imbuite arma domi, atque haec inrita
dudum templa
lovis
ignis,
—quid enim haud hcitum —ferat impius 685 ?
vilem, tanti premerent cum pectora luctus, famulam ius esse ratus dominoque ducique. sed videt haec, videt ille deum regnator, et ausis sera quidem, manet ira tamen." sic fatus, et arces
si
in
atque
respicit.
tecta fremunt
1 •
illic
alio
certamine
belli
690
volucres equitum praeverterat alas
;
vittae
ausus
P
:
»
BQ2
:
audes w at Barth
vitae PDNQ. ausis Kohlmann. :
:
et
Pw.
Lycurgus had just been sacrificing, and would be wearing the fillets Amphiaraus as a soothsayer wore them ;
habitually.
52
*
THEBAID, protect gentler
their
V. 667-691
Between them Adrastus
king.
in
mood and Amphiaraus,
fearing the strife of " Not so, I pray you, unhand kindred fillets," cry the sword Our sires are of one blood, give not vent to rage Thou first disarm " But Tydeus, his spirit " Daredst thou then slay not assuaged, rejoins :
I
I
!
:
—
—
upon the grave and in revenge for what a death and before so many thankless thousands the guide and preserver of the Inachian host, who was once a queen, and has Thoas for her sire and shining Euhan !
Is it too little for thy cowardice for her ancestor ? that, when on all sides thy folk are speeding to war,
thou alone keepest peace among the hurrying cavalcades ? Keep it then, and let the Grecian triumph find thee still groaning at this tomb." He spoke, and the other, now more controlled as " Indeed I thought your anger ebbed, replied troops were bound, not for the walls of Thebes, but hither with hostile intent. March on then to destroy, if kindred murder so delights you, flesh first your arms at home, ay, and let impious fire what indeed devour Jove's temple that but is not la\\-ful ? now I sought in vain, if I thought, oppressed by bitter grief, that I had power upon a worthless But the ruler slave, who am her king and lord of the gods beholds it, yea he beholds it, and his wrath, though late it fall, awaits your daring deeds." So speaking he looks back toward the city. And lo there another armed affray is raging from house to house ; recent Fame had outstripped the horsemen's :
—
—
'^
I
!
Ironically spoken it was only a babe's death. let Jove's temple be destroyed, if This too is ironical he was so impious as to. think he had power over his own *
:
'
slave
:
!
5S
STATIUS Fama
recens, geminos alis amplexa^ tumultus ad fata rapi atque illi iani occumbere leto, sic meritam Hypsipylen iterant, creduntque, nee irae 695 fit mora, iamque faces et tela penatibus instant, vertere regna fremunt raptumque auferre Lycurgum :
illi
cum
love
cumque
aris
;
resonant ululatibus aedes
femineis, versusque dolor dat terga timori.
Alipedmn curru sed enim sublimis Adrastus secum ante ora virum fremibunda Thoantida portans medius turmis, et " parcite, parcite " clamat, actum saeve, meritus nee tale Lycurgus
it
!
701
" nil
"
excidium, gratique inventrix fluminis ecce ^ sic ubi diversis maria evertere procellis hinc Boreas Eurusque, illinc niger imbribus Auster, pulsa dies regnantque hiemes, venit aequoris alti 706 rex sublimis equis, geminusque ad spumea Triton frena natans late pelago dat signa cadenti, !
iam plana Thetis, montesque et litora crescunt. Quis super um tanto solatus funera voto 710 pensavit lacrimas inopinaque gaudia maestae rettulit Hypsipylae ? tu gentis conditor, Euhan, qui geminos iuvenes Lemni de litore vectos et
intuleras
Nemeae mirandaque
fata parabas.
causa viae genetrix, nee inhospita tecta Lycurgi praebuerant aditus, et protinus ille tyranno nuntius exstinctae miserando vulnere prolis. ^
alis
amplexa
Pw
:
agilis
complexa Lachmann aulis recens as a parenthesis. :
Garrod, who brackets volucres Certainly the repetition of alas acteristic of Statins. * ecce Pw haec est Phillimore. .
.
.
:
54
715
.
.
.
alis is
odd, but a char-
THEBAID,
V. 692-717
flying squadrons, with
twofold tumults gathered beneath her wings some repeat that Hypsipyle is being dragged to death, some that she is even now meeting her fate, and is deserving of it they believe, nor stay their anger, and already brands and ;
:
javelins fly against the palace, cries are raised to overturn the kingdom, and to seize and carry away
Lycurgus with Jove and all his shrines the houses re-echo with female shrieks, and routed grief flees before panic ten'or. But Adrastus, aloft upon his car of wing-footed steeds and bearing with him the daughter of Thoas in the sight of the raging warriors, di'ives in amongst the ranks and cries " Give o'er, give o'er no cruel deed has been done, nor has Lycurgus deserved to perish thus, and lo here is the discoverer of the ;
:
;
!
welcome stream " So when yriih opposing blasts Boreas and Eurus from one quarter, and from another Auster black with rain has upheaved the sea, when day is banished and the hurricanes hold sway, high on his chariot comes the ruler of the deep, and twyformed Triton s>vimming by the foaming bridles gives signal far and wide to the subsiding main Thetis is smooth again, and hills and shores emerge. Which of the gods consoled her loss, and by grant!
;
ing her heart's desire brought joys unhoped-for to sad
Hypsipyle and recompense for tears ? Thou, Euhan, author of her race, who didst convey the tvrin youths " from Lemnos' shore to Nemea, and wert preparing a wondrous destiny. In search of their mother they came, and not inhospitably had the palace of Lycurgus given them entry, when forthwith came that
message to the monarch of "
his offspring's piteous
Their names were Thoas and Euneus.
55
STATIUS
—pro —regique
ergo adsunt comites
mens hominum
!
fors et
caeca futuri sed Lemnos ad
favent
;
aures
primum dictusque Thoas, per tela manusque matremque avidis complexibus ambo
ut
720
inruerant,
diripiunt flentes alternaque pectora mutant,
velut rupes immoto saxea visu haeret et expertis non audet credere divis. ut vero et vultus et signa Argoa relictis ensibus atque umeris amborum intextus lason, ilia
725
munere tanto maduerunt lumina fletu.
cesserunt luctus, turbataque conruit, atque alio
addita signa polo, laetoque ululante tumultu tergaque et aera dei motas crepuere per auras. Tunc pius Oeclides, ut prima silentia volgi mollior ira dedit placidasque accessus ad aures " audite, o ductor Nemeae lectique potentes Inachidae, quae certus agi manifestat Apollo, iste
quidem
Argolicis
730
:
haud olim indebitus armis
luctus adest, recto descendunt limite Parcae et sitis interitu fluviorum et letifer anguis,
735
:
et puer, heu nostri signatus nomine fati, Archemorus, cuncta haec superum demissa suprema mente fluunt. differte animos festinaque tela 740 ponite mansuris donandus honoribus infans. et meruit det pulchra suis libamina virtus manibus, atque utinam plures innectere pergas, ;
;
"
Amphiaraus.
*
The metaphor
" fluunt," "
56
1.
is
probably
of a
river-channel
740.
"Archemorus" means "the beginning
of
doom."
;
cf.
— THEBAID,
V. 718-743
—
death. Therefore hasten they to his support so strange is Chance, so blind the purposes of men " and favour the king's cause but when " Lemnos and " Thoas " reached their ears, straight had they I
;
rushed through weapons and troops of men, and both with tears snatch their mother to their greedy embrace and in turn press her to their bosoms. But she, like a stony rock, with countenance unmoved stirs not nor dares believe the gods she knows so well. But when she recognized their faces and the marks of Argo on the swords the mariners had left and Jason's name inwoven on their shoulders, her grief was stayed, and overcome by so great a blessing she swooned, and her eyes were moist ^vith other tears. Signs too were shown in heaven, and the drums and cymbals of the god and the glad huzzas of his wild train resounded through the echoing air. Then the devout Oeclides," so soon as WTath appeased made the crowd fall silent, and there was " Hearken, O ruler of approach to tranquil ears Nemea and ye flower of Argive princes, what Apollo surely reveals for us to do. Long hath this woe been ordained for you at Argive hands, unwavering runs the line of Destiny.^ The drought of perished streams, the deadly serpent, and the child Archemorus, whose name, alas, bears the seal of our fate," all these events flow down and issue from the high purpose of the gods. A truce now to your passions, lay down your hasty arms To this infant enduring honours must be paid. Truly he hath deserved them :
!
;
let virtue
make
fair libation to a virtuous soul,
and
would that thou mightest continue, O Phoebus, to weave even more delays, would that new chances 37
STATIUS Phoebe, moras, semperque novis bellare vetemur casibus, et at vos
semper Thebe funesta recedas
magnorum
felices,
transgressi fata
!
745
parentum
longum quibus hinc per saecula nomen,
dum Lernaea palus et dum pater Inachus ibit, dum Nemea tremulas campis iaculabitur umbras, ne
fletu violate
nam
deus
iste,
sacrum, ne plangite divos
:
deus, Pyliae nee fata senectae
maluerit, Phrygiis aut degere longius annis." finierat,
58
caeloque cavam nox induit umbram.
750
THEBAID,
V. 744^753
might ever bar us from the fray, and thou, O deadly And O ye Thebes, fade from our sight for ever happy ones, who have surpassed the common fate of noble parents, whose name will long endure through the ages, while Lerna's lake remains and father Inachus flows on, while Nemea throws the flickering shadows across her fields profane not this holy rite by weeping, mourn not for the gods for a god is he, yea a god, nor would he prefer to enjoy a Pylian " age, nor a life that outlived the Phrygian span." He finished, and night wrapt the heaven in her !
—
:
enfolding shade. "
i.e.,
longer than Nestor or Priam,
i 59
; :
LIBER VI Nuntia multivago Danaas pei'labitur urbes gradu, sancire novo sollemnia busto Inachidas ludumque super, quo Martia bellis praesudare paret seseque accendere virtus. Graium ex more decus primus Pisaea per arva hune pius Alcides Pelopi certavit honorem pulvereumque fera crinem detersit oliva proxima vipereo celebratur^ libera nexu Phocis, Apollineae bellum puerile pharetrae mox circum tristes servata Palaemonis aras nigra superstitio, quotiens animosa resumit Leueothea gemitus et arnica ad litora festa tempestate venit planctu conclamat uterque Isthmos. Echioniae responsant flebile Thebae. et nunc eximii regum, quibus Argos alumnis
Fama
:
5
;
;
10
:
conexum
15
quorumque ingentia tellus Aonis et Tyriae suspirant nomina matres, concurrunt nudasque movent in proelia vires ceu primum ausurae trans alta ignota biremes, seu Tyrrhenam hiemem, seu stagna Aegaea lacessant, tranquillo prius arma lacu clavumque levesque 21 caelo,
explorant remos atque ipsa pericula discunt ^
"
The
celebratur
P
:
celebravit w.
festivals alluded to are those at
and Isthmus of Corinth. * Boeotian. "Tyrian " =Theban.
60
Olympia, Delphi,
BOOK
VI
glides through the Danaan that the Inachidae are ordaining sacred rites for the new tomb, and games thereto, whereby their martial valour may be kindled and have foretaste of the sweat of war. Customary among the Greeks is such a festival first " did the dutiful Alcides contest this honour with Pelops in the fields of Pisa, and brush the dust of combat from next is celebrated his hair with the wild-olive spray the freeing of Phocis from the serpent's coils, the then the dark battle of the boy Apollo's quiver cult of Palaemon is solemnized about the gloomy
Far-travelling
cities,
and
Rumour
tells
:
;
;
undaunted Leucothea renews her and in the time of festival comes to the welcoming shores from end to end Isthmos resounds with lamentation and Echionian Thebes makes answering wail. And now the peerless princes whose rearing links Argos with heaven, princes whose mighty names the Aonian * land and Tyrian mothers utter with sighs, meet in rivalry and arouse their naked vigour to the fray just as the two-banked galleys that must venture the unknown deep, whether they provoke the stormy Tyrrhenian or the calm Aegean sea, first prove on a smooth lake their tackling and rudder and nimble oars, and learn to altars, so oft as
grief,
:
:
face the real perils
;
but when their crews are 61
STATIUS at cum experta cohors, tunc pontum inrunipere fretae longius ereptasque oculis non quaerere terras. Clara laboriferos caelo Tithonia currus 25 extulerat vigilesque deae pallentis habenas ct Nox et cornu fugiebat Somnus inani iam plangore viae, gemitu iam regia mugit flebilis, acceptos longe nemora avia frangunt multiplicantque sonos. sedet ipse exutus honoro 30 vittarum nexu genitor squalentiaque ora sparsus et incultam ferali pulvere barbam. asperior contra planctusque egressa viriles exemplo famulas premit hortaturque volentes orba parens, lacerasque super prorumpere^ nati 35 relliquias ardet totiensque avolsa refertur. arcet et ipse pater, mox ut maerentia dignis vultibus Inachii penetrarunt limina reges, ceu nova tunc clades et primo saucius infans vulnere letalisve inrumperet atria serpens, 40 ;
sic alium ex alio quamquam lassata fragorem pectora congenxinant, integratoque resultant accensae clamore fores sensere Pelasgi invidiam et lacrimis excusant crimen obortis. Ipse, datum quotiens intercisoque tumultu conticuit stupefacta domus, solatur Adrastus adloquiis genitorem ultro, nunc fata recensens resque hominum duras et inexorabile pensum, nunc aliam prolem mansuraque numine dextro ;
pignora.
nondum ^
orsis
prorumpere
modus, et lamenta redibant.
P
:
procumbere
is thought of as pouring earth, cf.x. 111. * Much of the following can be Consolatory poems of the Silvae. "
Sleep
45
w.
slumber from a horn
upon the
62
paralleled
from the
THEBAID,
VI. 23-50
trained, then confidently do they push further out into the main nor seek the vanished coast.
The bright consort of Tithonus had shown in heaven her toil-bringing car, and Night and Sleep ^ith empty horn" were fleeing from the pale goddess' wakeful reins ; already the ways are loud >Wth wailing, and the palace with tearful lamentation from afar the wild forests catch the sounds, and scatter them in a thousand echoes. The father himself* sits stripped of the honour of the twined fillet, his unkempt head and neglected beard sprinkled with the dust of mourning. More Wolent than he and passionate with more than a man's grief, the bereaved mother urges on her handmaidens by example and by speech, Milling though they be, and yearns to cast herself upon the mangled remains of her child, and as oft they tear her from them and bring her back. Even the father too restrains her. Soon when the Inachian princes ^^ith royal bearing entered the sorrowing portals, then, as though the stroke were fresh and the babe but newly hurt, or the deadly serpent had burst into the palace, they smite their breasts though wearied and raise clamour upon clamour, and the doors re-echo vith the new-kindled wailing ; the Pelasgians feel their ill-will and plead their innocence with streaming tears. Adrastus himself, whenso'er the tumult was quelled and the distracted house fell silent, and opportunity was given, addressed the sire unbidden with consoling words, re\iewng now the cruel destiny of mankind and the inexorable thread of doom, now gi\ing hope of other offspring and pledges that by heaven's favour would endure. But he had not ended, when mourning broke forth anew. Nor does the king more gently ;
63
— STATIUS ille
quoque adfatus non moUius audit amicos,
quam
51
ponto vota virum aut tenues curant vaga fulmina nimbos. Tristibus interea raniis teneraque cupresso damnatus flammae torus et puerile feretrum 55 texitur ima virent agresti stramina cultu proxima graniineis operosior area sertis, et pieturatus morituris floribus agger tertius adsurgens Arabum strue tollitur ordo Eoas complexus opes incanaque glebis 60 tura et ab antiquo durantia cinnama Belo. summa crepant auro, Tyrioque attollitur ostro molle supercilium, teretes hoc undique gemmae inradiant, medio Linus intertextus acantho letiferique canes 65 opus admirabile semper oderat atque oculos flectebat ab omine mater, arma etiam et veterum exuvias circumdat avorum gloria mixta malis adflictaeque ambitus aulae, ceu grande exsequiis onus atque immensa ferantur membra rogo, sed cassa tamen sterilisque dolentes 70 fama iuvat, parvique augescunt funere manes, inde ingens lacrimis honor et miseranda voluptas, trucis lonii rabies clamantia
:
;
;
:
muneraque
namque
in cineres annis graviora feruntur
et pharetras brevioraque tela dicarat festinus voti pater insontesque sagittas ;
iam tunc
illi
et nota stabuli de
nomen pascebat equos
in
A
75
gente probatos
—cinctusque sonantes
legendary king of Egypt, father of Danaus also an Asiatic monarch, as in Virg. Aen. i. 621 and Ov. M. iv. 213. Statins only means "cinnamon from the East," cf. Silv. vith upreared shoulders and holds high suspended his yoke-fellow and the steeds that shared his toil on either side. Straightway the Aonian exile he drops the is flung backward head-over-heels reins, and the chariot, freed from restraint, dashes far away. But past him as he lies on the crumbling ;
—
:
VOL.
II
H
.97
ST ATI us Taenarii currus et Thessalus axis et heros Lemnius obliqua, quantum vitare dabatur, transabiere fuga.
tandem
caligine
mersum
510
adcursu comitum caput aegraque tollit membra solo, et socero redit baud speratus Adrasto. Quis mortis, Thebane, locus, nisi dura negasset Tisiphone, quantum poteras dimittere bellum ? 515 te Thebe fraterque palam, te plangeret Argos, te Nemee, tibi Lerna comas Larissaque supplex poneret, Archemori maior colerere sepulcro. Tum vero Oeclides, quamquam iam carta sequenti praemia, cum vacuus domino prior iret^ Arion, ardet adhuc cupiens vel inanem vincere currum. 520 dat vires refovetque deus volat ocior euro, ceu modo carceribus dimissus in arva solutis, verberibusque iubas et terga lacessit habenis increpitans Caerumque levem Cygnumque nivalem. nunc saltem, dum nemo prior, rapit igneus orbes 525 axis, et effusae longe sparguntur harenae. dat gemitum tellus et iam tunc saeva minatur. forsitan et victo prior isset Arione Cygnus, sed vetat aequoreus vinci pater hinc vice iusta gloria mansit equo, cessit victoria vati. 530 huic pretium palmae gemini cratera ferebant Herculeum iuvenes ilium Tirynthius olim ferre manu sola spumantemque ore supino vertere, seu monstri victor seu Marte, solebat. erigit
;
:
:
^
prior
Unger,
iret
cf. "
98
ii.
Mueller
:
praeiret
Pw
:
domitore praeir
551.
i.e.,
Amphiaraus, Admetus, and Thoas.
THEBAID,
\'I.
.308-534
earth sweep the Taenarian car and the Thessahan axle and the Lcmnian hero," and just avoid him by swerving in their flight. His friends rush up, and at last he lifts his dazed head and reeling limbs from the ground, and returns, scarce hoped for by his fatherin-law Adrastus. How timely then, Theban, had been thy death, had not stem Tisiphone forbidden How grievous a war couldest thou have prevented Thebe had bewailed thee and thy brother made show thereof, and Argos too had mourned, and Xemea and Lerna and Larissa had in suppliant guise shorn tresses for thee, thou hadst excelled Archemorus in funeral pomp. Then Oeclides, although the prize was now sure for him as he followed, since masterless Arion held first place, yearned yet with keen desire to pass even the empty chariot. The god lends strength and refreshment SAvifter than the East wind he flies, as though the barrier were but just fallen and he were starting on the race, and calling aloud on nimble
O
!
!
;
Caerus and snow-white Cygnus, plies their necks A\ith blows and shakes the reins upon their backs. Now at least, when nobody is in front, the fiery axle devours the course, and the scattered sand is thrown afar. The earth groans, and even then savagely threatens. And perchance Arion too had OAvned defeat and Cygnus taken first place, but his ocean-sire thus by a just suffers him not to be defeated division the glory remained for the horse, but the prophet gained the victorj'. His meed of triumph the was a Herculean bowl, borne by two youths Tirj'nthian on a time was wont to take it in one hand, and with head flung back quaff it foaming, whether victorious over a monster or in the field of :
;
99
STAT us I
Centauros habet arte truces aurumque figuris 535 hie mixta Lapitharum caede rotantur saxa, faces aliique iterum crateres, ubique ingentes morientum irae tenet ipse furentem Hylaeum et torta molitur robora barba. at tibi Maeonio fertur circumflua limbo 540 pro meritis, Admete, chlamys repetitaque multo murice Phrixei natat hie contemptor ephebus terribile
j
:
;
:
aequoris et picta tralucet caerulus unda in latus ire rnanus^ mutaturusque videtur braccliia, nee siccum speres in stamine crinem 545 contra autem frustra sedet anxia turre suprema Sestias in specuhs, moritur prope conscius ignis. has Adrastus opes dono victoribus ire imperat at generum famula solatur Acliaea. Sollicitat tunc ampla viros ad praemia cursu 550 praeceleres agile studium et tenuissima virtus, pacis opus, cum sacra vocant, nee inutile bellis subsidium, si dextra neget. prior omnibus Idas, nuper Olympiads umbratus tempora ramis, excipiunt plausu Pisaea iuventus 555 prosilit Eleaeque manus. sequitur Sicyonius Alcon, fl et bis in Isthmiaca victor clamatus harena Phaedimus, alipedumque fugam praegressus equorum " ante Dymas, sed tunc aevo tardante secutus. multi et, quos varii tacet ignorantia vulgi, 56a hinc atque hinc subiere. sed Arcada Parthenopaeum ;
;
;
:
;
^
^
" * '
{i.e.
videntur)
:
manu Markland.
i.e., the mixing-bowls portrayed on this bowl. Leander, who swam from Abydos to Sestos.
i.e.,
boxing,
100
manus Pw
in contrast to the robuster sports of chariot-racings etc.
;
cf.
1.
730.
THEBAID,
VI. 535-561
Mars. Fierce Centaurs has it, cunningly \\Tought, d fearful shapes in gold here amid slaughter of ipithae are stones and torches flying, and again her bowls " everywhere the furious anger of dying n he himself seizes the raging Hylaeus, and ips him by the beard and ^\ields his club. But for ;Le, Admetus, is brought for thy deser\ing a cloak with a flowing border of Maeonian dye, stained many a time with purple here swims the youth contemptuous of Phrixean waters,* and gleams with seablue body through the pictured wave ; one sees the sideward sweep of his arm, and he seems about to make the alternate stroke, nor would one think to find his hair drj- in the woven fabric. Yonder high upon her tower sits anxiously watching, all in vain, the Sestian maid near her the conscious lamp droops and flickers. These rich rewards Adrastus bids be given to the \ictors but his son-in-law he consoles with an Achaean handmaid. Then he incites those heroes who are speediest of foot to strive for ample rewards a contest of agility where prowess is frailest,'^ fit pursuit for peace, when sacred games in\-ite, nor useless in war as a refuge should power of arm fail. Before all the rest Idas leaps to the front, whose temples were lately shaded by Olympian wTcaths ; the youth of Pisa and the bands of Elis hail him with applause. Alcon of Sicyon follows, and Phaedimus, twice acclaimed the victor on the sands of Isthmus, and Dymas, who once outstripped the flight of wing-footed steeds, but now they outran him by reason of retarding age. Many too, whom the ignorant multitude received in silence, came forward from this side and from that. But for Parthenopaeus the Arcadian they call aloud, and :
;
;
:
;
;
;
:
101
STATIUS appellant densique cient vaga murmura circi. nota parens cursu quis Maenaliae Atalantes nesciat egregium decus et vestigia cunctis indeprensa procis ? onerat celeberrima natum 565 mater, et ipse procul fama iam notus inermes narratur cervas pedes inter aperta Lycaei tollere et emissum cursu deprendere telum. tandem exspectatus volucri super agmina saltu emicat et torto chlamydem diffibulat auro. 57(> efFulsere artus, membrorumque omnis aperta est laetitia, insignes umeri, nee pectora nudis deteriora genis, latuitque in corpore vultus.^ ipse tamen formae laudem aspernatur et arcet mirantes tune Palladios non inscius haustus 57,3 incubuit pinguique cutem fuscatur olivo. hoc Idas, hoc more Dymas aliique nitescunt. sic ubi tranquillo perlucent sidera ponto vibraturque fretis caeli stellantis imago, omnia clara nitent, sed clarior omnia supra 580 Hesperos exercet radios, quantusque per altum aethera, caeruleis tantus monstratur in undis. proximus et forma nee multum segnior Idas cursibus atque aevo iuxta prior attamen illi iam tenuem pingues florem induxere palaestrae, 58") deserpitque genis nee se lanugo fatetur intonsae sub nube comae, tunc rite citatos explorant acuuntque gradus, variasque per artes exstimulant docto languentia membra tumultu ;
;
;
:
poplite nunc sidunt flexo, nunc lubrica forti
^
latuitque in corpore vultus {corr. from aluitque in : patuitque (valuitque Klotz) in corpore virtus
corpore virtus) Peyrared.
102
P
59(t
THEBAID, arouse
packed
VI. 562-590
murmurs that roam throughout the closecircus. Well known is his parent for speed who cannot tell of the peerless renown of
of foot Atalanta, and of those footprints that no suitor could o'ertake ? The son bears all his mother's glory, and he himself, already known to fame, is said to catch on foot the defenceless hinds in the open glades of Mount Lycaeus, and, as he runs, to o'ertake the flung javelin. Long expected, at last darts he forward, leaping lightly o'er the companies, and unfastens the twisted golden clasp of his cloak. His limbs shine forth, and all his graceful frame is revealed, his fine shoulders, and breast as smooth and comely as his cheeks, and his face was lost in his body's beauty. But he scorns the praise of his fairness, and suffers not admirers to come near him. Then he cunningly sets to work with the draughts of Pallas," and makes his skin ta^^•ny with rich oil. Thus do Idas and Dymas and the rest shine sleek and glossy. So when the starlight glitters on a tranquil sea, and the spangled heaven is mirrored tremulous in the deep, brilliant is every star, but more brilliant than the rest does Hesperus shoot his beams, and brightly as he flames in the high heavens, so bright is his reflection in the dark-blue waves. Idas is next in beauty, nor much slower in speed, next older too in years but for him already has the palaestra's oil brought on the tender growth, and the down is creeping o'er his cheeks, nor yet confesses itself among the cloud of unshorn locks. Then they duly try their speed and sharpen up their paces, and by various arts and now feigned excitement stir their languid limbs they sink down with bended knees, now smite with " Patron goddess of Athens, to whom the olive was sacred. 103 ;
;
;
STATIUS pectora conlidunt plausu, nunc ignea tollunt crura brevemque fugam necopino fine reponunt. Ut ruit atque aequum submisit regula limen, corripuere leves spatium, campoque refulsit nuda cohors volucres isdem modo tardius arvis 595 credas e plebe Cydonum isse videntur equi Parthorumque fuga totidem exsiluisse sagittas. non aliter celeres Hyrcana per avia cervi, cum procul impasti fremitum accepere leonis sive putant, rapit attonitos fuga caeca metusque 600 congregat, et longum dant cornua mixta fragorem. effugit hie oculos rapida puer ocior aura Maenalius, quem deinde gradu premit horridus Idas inspiratque umero, flatuque et pectoris umbra terga premit. post ambiguo discrimine tendunt 605 Phaedimus atque Dymas, illis celer imminet Alcon. flavus ab intonso pendebat vertice crinis Arcados hoc primis Triviae pascebat ab annis :
;
;
munus et, Ogygio victor cum Marte nequiquam patriis audax promiserat
redisset,
610
aris.
tunc liber nexu lateque in terga solutus occursu zephyri retro fugit^ et simul ipsum impedit infestoque volans obtenditur^ Idae. inde dolum iuvenis fraudique adcommoda sensit tempora iam finem iuxta, dum limina victor Parthenopaeus init, correpto crine reductum occupat, et longae^ primus ferit ostia portae. ;
^ ^
fugit
P(i)
:
Bentley. ostenditur Poj.
:
longe
615
fluit
:
obtenditur B * longae w
FN.
"limina" practically = " limes," the
line
marking the
1.
In a Greek stadium the and the goal was 30 yards 104
line
marking the starting-point But " longae " might =
long.
THEBAID,
VI. 591-617
now ply their fiery feet in short sprint and sudden stop. As soon as the bar fell, and left the threshold level, loud claps their slippery breasts,
they nimbly dashed away and the naked forms gleamed upon the plain more slowly seemed the swift coursers to move of late on the same ground one might deem them so many arrows poured forth from Cydonian host or flying Parthians. Not otherwise speed the stags over H}Tcanian wilds, hearing, or fancying that they hear, a famished lion roar afar bhnd fear drives them in crowding panic-stricken flight, amid the ceaseless noise of clashing horns. Then swifter than the rapid breeze the Maenalian boy outstrips the sight, and hard behind him fierce Idas runs and breathes upon his shoulder and presses close upon his rear with panting breath and overshadowing form. After them Phaedimus and Dymas strive in doubtful contest, near them fleet Alcon. The yellow hair hung down from the Arcadian's unshorn head this from his earliest years he cherished ;
:
;
;
and vainly boasting had vowed it to his country's altars, when he should return in triumph from the Ogygian war. At that time, freed from its band and streaming loose behind, it flies backward as it meets the wind, at once hindering his own speed, and spreading out in front of his rival Idas. Thereat the youth bethought him of deceit and an opportunity for fraud ; already close upon the goal, even while Parthenopaeus is triumphantly crossing the threshold," he grasps his hair, and pulhng him back seizes his place, and is the first to breast the wide entrance of the goal.'' as a gift to Tri\ia,
" longinquae " (distant) here. be right.
In any case " longe " cannot
105
:
STATIUS Arcades arma fremunt, armis defendere regem, raptum decus et meriti reddantur honores, contendunt totoque parant descendere circo. 620 sunt et quis Idae placeat dolus, ipse regesta Parthenopaeus Immo vultumque oculosque madentes obruit, accessit lacrimarum gratia formae. pectora nunc maerens, nunc ora indigna cruento ungue secat meritamque comam, furit undique clamor ni
dissonus,
ambiguumque senis cunctatur Adrasti 626 tandem ipse refert " compescite litem,
consilium,
o pueri limite
!
:
virtus iterum
non uno,
temptanda
;
sed ite
latus hoc conceditur Idae,
tu diversa tene, fraus cursibus omnis abesto."
Audierant, dictoque manent.
630
mox numina supplex
Tegeaeus odorat "diva potens nemorum, tibi enim hie, tibi crinis honori debitus, eque tuo venit haec iniuria voto, si bene quid genetrix, si quid venatibus ipse 635 promerui, ne, quaeso, sinas hoc omine Thebas ire nee Arcadiae tantum meruisse pudorem." auditum manifesta fides vix campus euntcm affatu tacito iuvenis
:
sentit, et exilis plantis intervenit aer,
raraque^ non fracto vestigia pulvere pendent. inrumpit clamore fores, clamore recurrit
640
ducem prensaque fovet suspiria palma. cursus, operumque insignia praesto. Areas equum dono, clipeum gerit improbus Idas, ante
finiti
cetera plebs Lyciis vadit contenta pharetris.
Tunc ^
106
vocat, emisso
raraque
P
:
si
quis decernere disco
ramaqueHeinsius: raptaque
G'arrorf.
645
THEBAID,
VI. 618-640
The Arcadians cry "'To arms!" and \%-ith arms they hasten to defend their prince, if the lost prize and merited honour be not restored, and make ready to descend on all the course. Others again were pleased by the ruse of Idas. Parthenopaeus himself pours showers of earth upon his face and streaming eyes, and the comeliness of tears is added to his beauty. In his grief he rends with.bloody nails now his breast, now his innocent cheeks and guilty hair, while all around discordant clamour rages, and old Adrastus halts irresolute of counsel. At last he speaks: "Cease your prowess must be tried quarrelhng, youths Idas has this again but run not in one track only side keep thou apart yonder, and let there be no " cheating in the race They heard, and abide by his command. Then the youth of Tegea vriih silent prayer humbly en" Goddess, queen of the woodlands, treats the gods for to thee and to thine honour these locks of mine !
;
;
;
!
:
and from this vow comes my disgrace mother or I myself have deserved well of thee in hunting, suffer me not, I pray thee, to go illomened thus to Thebes, or to have won such bitter shame for Arcadia." Clear proof was given that he was heard. The plain scarce feels him as he goes, his feet treads tenuous air, and the rare footsteps hover and leave the dust unbroken. With a shout he dashes to the goal, with a shout he runs back to the chief, and seizing the palm appeased his grief. The running was over, and prizes for their toils stand ready. The Arcadian is given a horse, the shameless Idas bears away a shield, the rest go contented with Lycian quivers. Then he in\'ites anv who may wish to try the are vowed,
if
;
my
107
— — STATIUS impiger et vires
velit ostentare superbas.
massae pondera vix toto curvatus corpore iuxta deicit inspectant taciti expenduntque laborem 650 Inachidae. mox turba ruunt, duo gentis Achaeae, tres Ephyreiadae, Pisa satus unus, Acarnan it
iussus Pterelas, et aenae liibrica
;
Septimus et plures agitabat gloria, ni se arduus Hippomedon cavea stimulante tulisset in mcdios, lateque ferens sub pectore dextro 655 orbem alium " hunc potius, iuvenes, qui moenia saxis frangere, qui Tyrias deiectum vaditis arces, hunc rapite ast illud cui non iaculabile dextrae ;
:
:
pondus
?
" et
abreptum nullo conamine iecit absistunt procul attonitique fatentur
in latus.
660
cedere vix unus Phlegyas acerque Menestlieus hos etiam pudor et magni tenuere parentes promisere manum concessit cetera pubes sponte et adorato rediit ingloria disco. 665 qualis Bistoniis clipeus Mavortis in arvis ;
;
luce mala
Pangaea
ferit
solemque refulgens mugit ab hasta.
territat incussaque dei grave
Pisaeus Phlegyas opus incohat et simul omnes ea viso^ corpore virtus promissa. ac primum terra discumque manumque 671 asperat, excusso naox circum pulvere versat, quod latus in digitos, mediae quod certius ulnae conveniat, non artis egens hie semper amori abstulit in se oculos
:
:
^
ea viso
P
:
exhausto w
:
ex viso Baehrens.
" I have translated tlie word both " quoit " and " disk," though the discus, a plate of iron or stone about 10 or 12 inches in diameter, was very different from our quoit, which The "discus " is well illustrated by the familiar is a rinff. 108
THEBAID,
\'I.
047-673
and display untiring vigour and proud strength. At his command goes Pterelas, and with all his body bent scarce lays down beside him the slippery weight of the bronze mass in silence the sons of Inachus look on and estimate two of the toil. Soon a number rush forward Achaean race, three sons of Ephyre, one Pisa-born, the seventh an Acarnanian ; and more was the love of glory urging on, had not tall Hippomedon, incited by the crowd, come forward, and carrying another " Take this one rather, broad disk at his right side ye warriors, who are marching to shatter walls with stones, and to overthrow the Tyrian towers, take this As for that other, any hand can toss that one issue with the hurled quoit."
;
:
:
!
weight " and with no eifort he caught it up and threw it to one side. They fall back in amaze and scarce Phlegyas alone confess themselves outdone and eager Menestheus, compelled by sense of shame and noble ancestry, vouchsafed to try their strength the rest of their own accord gave place, and returned !
;
;
Even so the shield inglorious, marvelling at the disk. of Mars on the Bistonian * plain reflects an evil Ught on Mount Pangaeus, and shining strikes the sun with terror, and deeply clangs beneath the spear of the god.
straightway he Phlegyas of Pisa begins the toil all eyes upon himself, when they beheld liis frame, such promise of great deeds was there. And first with earth he roughens the quoit and his own hand, then shaking off the dust turns it right skilfully to see which side best suits his fingers, or fits more surely the middle of his arm. This sport had he ;
drew
"Discobolus" of Myron.
Thomas Gray wrote
translation of this passage (646-7;?5).
*
a verse Thracian.
109
ST ATI us ludus erat, patriae non tantum ubi laudis obiret sacra, sed alternis Alphcon utrumque solebat 675 metari ripis et, qua latissima distant, non umquam merso transmittere flumina disco. ergo operum fidens non protinus horrida campi iugera, sed caelo dextram metitur, humique pressus utroque genu collecto sanguine discum 680 ipse super sese rotat atque in nubila condit. ille citus sublime petit similisque cadenti crescit in adversum, tandemque exhaustus ab alto tardior ad terram redit atque immergitur arvis. sic cadit, attonitis quotiens avellitur astris, 685 Solis opaca soror procul auxiliantia gentes aera crepant frustraque timent, at Thessala victrix ridet anhelantes audito carmine bigas. conlaudant Danai, sed non tibi moUe tuenti, Hippomedon, maiorque manus speratur in aequo. 690 Atque illi extemplo, cui spes infringere dulce immodicas, Fortuna venit. quid numina contra tendere fas homini ? spatium iam immane parabat, iam cervix conversa, et iam latus omne redibat excidit ante pedes elapsum pondus et ictus 695 destituit frustraque manum demisit inanem. ingemuere omnes, rarisque ea visa voluptas. inde ad conatus timida subit arte Menestheus ;
:
Here again the reader may Myron.
"
of
refer to the
"Discobolus"
* It is flung aloft so swiftly that its fall by contrast is actually slower a rhetorical paradox. " Eclipses of the moon were believed to be caused by Thessalian witches, who were thought to have the power of drawing it down to earth ; the steeds are those of the chariot of the moon.
—
110
THEBAID,
VI. 674-698
ever loved, not only when he attended his country's famous festival, but he was wont to reckon the space between Alpheos' either bank, and, where they are most widely distant, to clear the river nor ever wet the disk. At once, then, confident in his powers he measures, not the rough acres of the plain, but the sky's expanse with his right arm, and ^\^th either knee bent earthward " he gathers up his strength and whirls the disk above him and hides it in the clouds. Swiftly it speeds aloft, and as though falHng grows faster as it mounts ^ at last exhausted it returns to earth more slowly from the height, and buries itself So falls, whenever she is torn from the in the field. astonished stars, the darkened sister of the sun " afar the peoples beat the bronze for succour, and indulge their fruitless fears, but the Thessalian hag triumphant laughs at the panting steeds who obey her spell. The Danai shout applause, though amid thy fro^vns, Hippomedon, and he hopes for a mightier throw along ;
;
the
level.\-ind gathers its earliest strength >vithin the clouds gentle as yet, it sways the leaves and the unprotected summits, but soon it has torn away the forest and laid the dark mountain bare to \iew. Come now, Pierian sisters, 'tis of no far-off deeds we bid you tell, sing your own country's wars, your own Aonia for ye beheld while Mars raged near and the quills of Helicon shook at the blaring of Tyrrhenian bronze. The horse of Sidonian Pterelas, untrustworthy in battle, carries his rider, tearing at the reins, through the enemy's lines ; and now he is free, so weary is his master's arm, when through his shoulder the spear of Tydeus flies, and pierces the youth's left thigh and nails him swooning to his seat away he dashes, pinned to his dead lord, and bears him on, :
!
;
;
;
!
:
;
;
though no more he holds weapon or bridle
:
even as 179
STATIUS cum
sua Centaurus moriens in terga recumbit.
certat opus ferri sternunt alterna furentes 640 Hippomedon Sybarin, Pylium Periphanta Menoeceus, Parthenopaeus Ityn Sybaris iacet ense cruento, cuspide trux Periphas, Itys insidiante sagitta. Caeneos Inachii ferro Mavortius Haemon colla rapit, cui dividuum trans corpus hiantes 645 :
:
truncum
oculi
quaerunt,
animus^
caput
;
arma
iacentis
iam rapiebat Abas
cornu deprensus Achiva
:
dimisit moriens clipeum hostilemque
Quis
suumque.
Baccheos, Eunaee, relinquere cultus, quis lucos, vetitus quibus emansisse sacerdos, 650 tibi
suasit et
adsuetum Bromio mutare furorem
?
quem
terrere queas ? clipei penetrabile textum pallentes hederae Nysaeaque serta coronant,
Candida pampineo subnectitur instita pilo, crine latent umeri, crescunt lanugine malae, et rubet imbellis Tyrio subtemine thorax, bracchiaque in manicis et pietae vincula plantae carbaseique sinus, et fibula rasilis auro
655
Taenariam fulva mordebat iaspide pallam,
quam
super a tergo velox corytus et arcus
660
pendentesque sonant aurata lynce pharetrae. it lymphante deo media inter milia longum vociferans "prohibete manus, haec omine dextro moenia Cirrhaea monstravit Apollo iuvenca parcite, in haec ultro scopuli venere volentes. 665 gens sacrata sumus gener huic est luppiter urbi :
;
:
^
"
Which
and there 180
animus Pui
:
Garrod
the oracle bade
built
a
city.
The
conj.
Cadmus heifer
umerus.
follow
was
to
till
it
be the
lay down, first
they
THEBAID,
VII. 639-666
a Centaur, not yet bereft of both his lives, sinks on his own back in death. They vie with each other in the deadly work in furious interchange Hippomedon lays Sybaris low, Menoeceus Pylian Periphas, Parthenopaeus Itys Sybaris falls a victim to the reeking blade, fierce Periphas to the spear-point, Itys to a treacherous arrow. Mavortian Haemus severs ^nth a blow the neck of Inachian Caeneus : his eyes -wide-opened seek the trunk across the cloven :
:
wound, his spirit the head; already Abas was spoihng him as he lay, when caught by an Achaean shaft he let fall in death his foeman's buckler and his own. Who persuaded thee, Eunaeus, to desert thy Bacchic Morship and the groves a priest may never leave, and to change thy Bromian frenzy } WTiora couldst thou make afraid ? Pale i\y-wreaths of Xysa garland the weak texture of thy shield, and a white riband is fastened to thy vine-wood javehn. Tresses hide his shoulders, and the down is yet growing on his cheeks his corslet blushes unwarlike with threads of Tyrian dye, he wears bracelets upon his arms and embroidered sandals on his feet, and is garbed in hnen folds a smooth golden clasp bites with a tawny jasper stone his Taenarian cloak, whereon rattle the nimble bow-case and the bow and the hanging quivers of gold-embroidered lynxes' hide. Crazed by the god he goes through the midst of " Stay your hands thousands, and cries afar these walls Apollo revealed by the good omen of Cirrha's heifer " Forbear rocks came willingly of their own accord to form them. A sacred race are we ;
;
:
!
!
!
:
Jove
is
this city's son-in-law,
and
its
father-in-law
saw on going out from the temple, hence " Cirrhaea," Delphic, from Cirrha, port of Delphi.
is
i.e.,
181
STATIUS Gradivusque
socer
Bacchum
;
haud
mentimur
alumnum et
magnum
Alciden."
iactanti talia frustra
turbidus aeria Capaneus occurrit in hasta. qualis ubi primam leo mane cubilibus atris
670
erexit rabiem et saevo speeulatur ab antro
aut cervum aut it
nondum bellantem
fremitu gaudens,
licet
fronte iuvencum,
arma gregesque lacessant
venantum, praedam videt et sua volnera nescit sic tum congressu Capaneus gavisus iniquo librabat magna venturam mole cupressum.
:
675
ante tamen " quid femineis ululatibus " inquit, " terrificas, nioriture, viros ? utinam ipse veniret, cui furis
!
haec Tyriis cane matribus
!
"
et
simul
hastam expulit
;
ilia
680 non ulla moretur iam terga reliquit. longisque crepat singultibus aurum, volans, ceu vis
obvia, vix sonuit clipeo et
arma
fluunt,
eruptusque sinus vicit cruor. occidis audax, occidis Aonii puer altera cura Lyaei. 685 marcida te fractis planxerunt Ismara thyrsis, te Tmolos, te Nysa ferax Theseaque Naxos et Thebana metu iuratus in orgia Ganges. Nee segnem Argolicae sensere Eteoclea turmae, parcior ad cives Polynicis inhorruit ensis. eminet ante alios iam formidantibus arva
Amphiaraus equis ac multo pulvere "
of
Semele was the wife of Jove, and Harmonia the daughter
Mars and Venus. *>
182
690
vertit
i.e.,
after Phegeus,
1.
603.
THEBAID,
VII. 667H391
GradivTis " Bacchus and great Alcides we truly call our children." Amid boasts so vain fierce Capaneus meets him, a tall spear in his hand. And as at break of day a Hon in his gloomy lair stirs up his freshawoken fury, and spies from the grim cave a hind or bullock with yet unwarlike forehead, and leaps forth with joyous roar, though assailed by the spears of hunting bands, but he sees his prey and knows not of his womids so then did Capaneus exult in :
:
the unequal conflict and poised for the throw the great weight of his cypress-spear. Yet first he cries " Why, doomed one, dost thou affright our troops :
with womanly howls ? Would that he for whom thou ragest would come himself to battle Go, bawl that message to thy Tyrian dames " and therewith he flung the spear, which in its flight, as though no force could meet and stay it, scarce rang upon the shield and already had passed clean through his back. His weapons fall, the gold resounds with long choking sobs, blood streams forth and overflows his bosom. Thou art fallen, bold youth thou too, one favourite more * of Aonian Lyaeus, art fallen. Thee languid Ismarus lamented with broken wands, thee Tmolus and fruitful Xysa mourned, and Naxos of Theseus' fame, and Ganges, that in fear swore fealty to I
I
;
Theban orgies."^ Nor was Eteocles found a sluggard by the Argolic bands, but Polynices' sword, more sparing, shrank from his countr}'men. Before the rest Amphiaraus shines pre-eminent, although already ^ his horses fear the ground, and 'mid clouds of dust he upturns the ' All these are places connected with Bacchus. conquered by him. according to one legend. See 1. 586.
India was
•^
183
,
ST ATI us
campum indignantem
famulo decus addit inane^ maestus et extremes obitus inlustrat Apollo, ille etiam clipeum galeamque incendit honoro 695 sidere nee tarde fratri, Gradive, dedisti, ne qua manus vatem, ne quid mortalia bello laedere tela queant sanctum et venerabile Diti funus eat.^ talis medios aufertur in hostes :
;
:
certus et ipse necis, vires fiducia leti suggerit inde viro maioraque membra diesque 700 laetior et numquam tanta experientia caeli, avertit morti contermina Virtus, si vacet ardet inexpleto saevi Mavortis amore, et fruitur dextra atque anima flagrante superbit. 705 hicne hominum casus lenire et demere Fatis quantum subito diversus ab illo, iura frequens ? qui tripodas laurusque sequi, qui doctus in omni nube salutato volucrem cognoscere Phoebo innumeram ferro plebem, ceu letifer annus 710 aut iubar adversi grave sideris, immolat umbris iaculo Phlegyan iaculoque superbum ipse suis Phylea, falcato Clonin et Chremetaona curru comminus hunc stantem metit, hunc a poplite sectum, cuspide non missa Chroniin Iphinoumque Sagenque ;
:
!
:
intonsumque Gyan sacrumque Lycorea Phoebo— 716 iam fraxineum demiserat hastae invitus :
—
robur, et excussis apparuit infula cristis Alcathoum saxo, cui circum stagna Carysti et domus et coniunx et amantes litora nati vixerat ille diu pauper scrutator aquarum, 1 addit inane w Garrod.
:
abdidit
omne '^
P P
eat
:
:
adicit omne erat w.
720 conj.
" i.e., the omens of the sky ("dies" often = " caelum ") grew more and more favourable. 184
THEBAID, indignant plain
upon
;
VII. 692-720
Apollo sadly sheds a vain lustre
and makes his last hours glorious. too and his helm he sets afire with starry
his servant,
His shield
splendours, nor, Gradivus, wert thou slow to grant thy brother that no human hand, no mortal weapon should have power to harm the seer, but that he should go to Dis sacred and venerable in death. In such A^ise, conscious himself of doom, he is borne into the thickest of the fray the assurance of death gives him new strength, his limbs grow mightier and the sky more favourable," nor ever knew he so well to read the heavens, had he but leisure but Valour, near neighbour of death, turns his gaze away. He glows with an insatiable love of savage War and revels in ;
:
his might, and his fieiy- soul exults. so oft alleviated the lot of man and
Is this
made
he who
the Fates
How
quickly changed from him who guidance of tripod and of bay, to salute Phoebus and learn the import of the birds in ever\- cloud Like some pestilence or adverse ray of baleful star, his sword oflFers up to his OA\n shade a host innumerable. With a javelin he slays Phleg}as and proud Phyleus, with scythed chariot he mows down Clonis and Chremetaon, the one standing to fight him, the other he severs at the knee with spear-thrust Chromis and Iphinous and Sages and unshorn Gyas and Lycoreus sacred to Phoebus the last unwillingly already had he driven home the ashen strength of the spear when the falling crest revealed the fillet with a stone Alcathous, to whom by the meres of Carystus was home and wife and his children who loved its shores. Long had he lived a poor searcher of the waters :
powerless
was
?
skilled to follow the
I
;
—
:
—
185
STATIUS decepit tellus, moriens hiemesque notosque laudat et expert! meliora pericula ponti. Aspicit has longe iamdudum Asopius Hypseus palantum strages ardetque avertere pugnam, quamquam baud ipse minus curru Tirynthia fundens robora sed viso praesens minor augure sanguis 726 ilium armis animisque cupit. probibebat iniquo agmine consertum cunei latus inde superbus exseruit patriis electum missile ripis, ac prius " Aonidum dives largitor aquarum, 730 :
;
;
:
etiamnum, Asope, favillis, da numen dextrae rogat hoc natusque tuique quercus alumna vadi fas et mihi spernere Phoebum, si tibi conlatus divum sator. omnia mergam fontibus arma tuis tristesque sine augure vittas. 735 audierat genitor vetat indulgere volentem Phoebus, et aurigam iactus detorquet in Hersen. elare Giganteis
:
;
"
:
ille ruit
:
deus ipse vagis succedit habenis, falso simulans Haliacmona vultu.
Lernaeum
tunc vero ardenti non ulla obsistere temptant 740 signa, ruunt solo terrore, et volnera citra mors trepidis ignava venit, dubiumque tuenti presserit infestos onus impuleritne iugales. sic ubi nubiferum montis latus aut nova ventis 745 solvit hiemps, aut victa situ non pertulit aetas, desilit horrendus canipo timor, arva^ virosque limite non uno longaevaque robora secum praecipitans, tandemque exhaustus turbine fesso aut vallem cavat aut medios intercipit amnes. ^
" i.e., *
a>
:
arma PS.
Argive.
For meaning see
his spear.
186
arva
11.
315 sqg.
The "oaken nursling"
is
THEBAID,
VII. 721-749
earth played him false, and dying he praises the storms and >\-inds, and the more welcome dangers of the famihar sea. Long has Asopian H^-pseus beheld from far the slaughter of the scattered rout, and burned to stay the tide of battle, though he himself not less has put to flight Tirynthian " forces but the sight of the augur made htm heed the present carnage less for him his warlike spirit yearns. A dense phalanx of the foe bars his way then proudly he makes ready a javehn, chosen from his father's banks, and first " O bounteous lavisher of Aonian streams, exclaims Asopus, yet renowned for the ashes of Giants,^ give power to this right hand thy son and the oaken nursling of thv river ask thee if thou didst strive with the Sire of all the gods, I may despise Phoebus. All his armour will I sink in thy waters, and the sad His father heard fillets from the augur's head." him, but Phoebus would not suffer him, fain though he was, to grant the prayer, and turns the blow aside upon Herses the charioteer. He falls, and the god himself takes up the straying reins, assiuning the feigned shape of HaUacmon of Lema. Then indeed no squadrons try to resist his fiery course, but flee in terror unallayed, and in their panic they die a 'tis doubtful to the \iew coward's death unwounded whether the fierce coursers are retarded or sped onward by the burden. So when a cloud-encompassed mountain-side is loosened by the fresh storms of A^inter, or by irresistible decay of age, it crashes down upon the plain, a fearful terror, and sweeps away in many a track of ruin fields, husbandmen, and aged oaks, and at length, its furious rush exhausted, either scoops out a vale or bars a river in mid-course. ;
:
:
:
;
;
;
187
— STATIUS non secus ingentique viro magnoque gravatus temo deo nunc hoc, nunc illo in sanguine fervet.
750
ipse sedens telis pariterque ministrat habenis Delius, ipse docet iactus adversaque flectit spicula fortunamque hastis venientibus aufert. sternuntur terra^ Melaneus pedes, Antiphus alto 755 nil defensus equo, genitusque Heliconide nympha Action,^ caesoque infamis fratre Polites, conatusque toris vittatam attingere Manto Lampus in hunc sacras Plioebus dedit ipse sagittas. et iam cornipedes trepidi ac moribunda reflantes 760 corpora rimantur terras, omnisque per artus sulcus et incisis altum rubet orbita membris. hos iam ignorantes terit impius axis, at illi vulnere semineces nee devitare facultas venturum super ora vident iam lubrica tabo 765 frena, nee insisti madidus dat temo, rotaeque :
—
;
sanguine
difficiles, et tardior ungula fossis visceribus tunc ipse furens in morte relicta spicula et e mediis exstantes ossibus hastas avellit, strident animae currumque sequuntur. :
770
se famulo summum confessus Apollo " utere luce tua longamque " ait, " indue famam,
Tandem
dum
me
tibi
iunctum Mors inrevocata veretur.
vincimur immites scis^ nulla revolvere Parcas stamina vade, diu populis promissa voluptas Elysiis, certe non perpessure Creontis imperia aut vetito nudus iaciture supulcro." ille refert contra, et paulum respirat ab armis '• olim te, Cirrhaee pater, peritura sedentem :
;
775
:
^ ^
*
188
terra
Pw
Action scis
Pw
:
Pw :
fas
:
terrae
Action
Kohhnann.
LN
:
Aethion QD.
DN (scis written over in D).
779
THEBAID.
VII. 750-779
Not otherwise does the chariot, burdened by the great warrior and the mighty god, drive furiously through many a scene of bloodshed. From his seat the Delian guides both reins and weapons, and instructs his aim he turns aside hostile darts and cheats the flying javelins of their fortune. Menaleus on foot is overthrown, and Antiphus, no whit defended by his lofty steed, and Action, born of a nymph of Hehcon, and Polites, ill-renowned for a brother's murder, and Lampus, who tried to defile the couch of the priestess Manto against him Phoebus with his own hand sped holy arrows. And now the homfooted steeds snort at the corpses in alarm and probe the ground, and every wheel-track runs o'er bodies and reddens deep with severed limbs. Some the remorseless axle grinds unconscious, but others halfdead from wounds and powerless to escape see it as it draws nigh to crush them. Already the reins are wet with gore, the slippery car gives no foothold, blood clogs the wheels and trampled entrails hinder the horses' hooves then the hero himself madly tears out darts abandoned in the slain and spears projecting from the midst of corpses ghosts shriek and pursue the chariot. At length, revealing to his servant all his godhead, " Use the light that is thine, and put Apollo said on eternal fame, while Death irrevocable fears me in thy company. We are overcome thou knowest that the cruel Fates unravel no threads depart, long-promised delight of Elysian peoples, thou who of a surety wilt never bend thy neck to Creon's rule, or lie exposed and barred from burial." The other, taking breath awhile from the fight, makes answer " Long since knew I, Cirrhaean father, that thou wert ;
:
—
—
:
:
:
:
;
:
189
ST ATI us
—
—
ad iuga quis tantus miseris honor ? ^axe trementi sensimus instantes quonam usque morabere manes audio iam rapidae eursum Stygis atraque Ditis flumina tergeminosque mali custodis hiatus. ;
accipe
commissum
?
capiti decus, accipe laurus,
quas Erebo deferre nefas. nunc voce suprema, 785 si qua recessuro debetur gratia vati, deceptum tibi, Phoebe, larem poenasque nefandae coniugis et pulchrum nati commendo furorem." desiluit maerens lacrimasque avertit Apollo tunc vero ingemuit currusque orbique iugales. 790 non aliter caeco nocturni turbine Cori :
cum iam damnata
peritura ratis,
scit
sororis
igne Therapnaei fugerunt carbasa fratres.
lamque recessurae paulatim horrescere
terrae terga quati graviorque efFervere pulvis
summaque
murmure campus. 796 hunc esse fragorem, hortanturque gradus alius^ tremor arma virosque roirantesque inclinat equos iam frondea nutant culmina, iam muri, ripisque Ismenos apertis 800 coeperat
;
inferno mugit iam
bella putant trepidi bellique ;
;
exciderunt irae, nutantia figunt dubiasque vagi nituntur in hastas comminus inque vicem viso pallore recedunt. sic ubi navales miscet super aequora pugnas contempto Bellona mari, si forte benigna"^ effugit
;
tela solo,
^
Pw
alius
^
benigna Pcj
"
The
:
:
maligna
BN:
805
and uss. PJiiUimore conj. nigrabit.
altus Heinslus
late
were
star of Helen was baneful, as those of her brothers beneficial, to ships at sea. also Cf. Silv. iii. 2. 8 sqq.
Plin.
N.H.
190
;
ii.
37.
— THEBAID
\II. 780-805
seated on my doomed chariot's trembling axle such high honour to my hapless pUght ? How long wilt thou delay the death that threatens me ? Already I hear the flow of rapid Styx, and the dark rivers of Dis and the triple baying of his noxious Receive the honours thou didst bestow sentinel. upon my head, receive the laurels which may not be taken down to Erebus. Now ^nth my last words, if any gratitude be owed to thy prophet ere he depart,
—
why
I
commend
to thee,
O
Phoebus,
my
betrayed home
and the punishment of my wicked spouse and my Sad at heart Apollo leapt down son's noble rage." then verily groaned and turned to hide his tears the chariot and the horses, thus left desolate. Not :
otherwise in a blind hurricane at night, when the North-wester blows, does a ship know that she will perish, so soon as the brethren of Therapnae have fled the sails their sister's fire has doomed." And now little by Uttle the earth began to shudder to its rending, and the surface to rock, and the dust to rise in thicker clouds, already an infernal bellowing fills the plain. In alarm they think it is the battle and the noise of conflict, and hasten on their steps a shock far different hurls arms and warriors and marvelling steeds to earth already the leafy summits are nodding, and the walls, and Ismenos flees with all his banks exposed to \iew ; their wTath is abated, they fix their swaying weapons in the ground, or wandering meet and lean on their rocking spears, and start when they see each other's pallor. So when Bellona, scorning the deep,** joins ships in battle on the sea, then, should a kindly tempest :
;
^ i.e., outraging it by making " Kindly," as being safer than batue.
it
the
scene
of war.
191
STATIUS tempestas,
mors
sibi
quisque cavent, ensesque recondit
alia, et socii
campo
talis erat
pacem
fecere timores.
belli fluitantis
imago,
sive laborantes concepto flamine terrae
ventorum rabiem
et clusum eieeere furorem, exedit sen putre solum carpsitque terendo^
810
unda latens, sive hac volventis machina caeli incubuit, sive omne fretum Neptunia movit cuspis et extremas gravius mare torsit in oras, 815 seu vati datus ille fragor, seu terra minata est fratribus ecce alte praeceps humus ore profundo dissilit, inque vicem timuerunt sidera et umbrae, ilium ingens haurit specus et transire parantes mergit equos ; non arma manu, non frena remisit 820 sicut erat, rectos defert in Tartara currus :
:
respexitque cadens caelum campumque coire ingemuit, donee levior distantia rursus miscuit arva tremor lucemque exclusit Averno. ^
192
terendo later mss.
:
ferendo Pa).
THEBAID,
VII. 806-823
own safety, and another death be sheathed, and common fears make peace among them. Such was the appearance of the heaWng combat on the plain. Whether the earth, labouring with imprisoned blasts, expelled the pent-up fury of the raging ^vind, or whether hidden waters ate away and wore down and sapped the crumbling soil, or the fabric of the rolling sky flung that way its weight, or Neptune's trident moved all the ocean and flung too vast a sea upon the shore, or whether that uproar was a tribute to the seer, or Earth threatened the brothers lo in a gaping chasm the ground yawns sheer and deep, and stars and shades feel mutual terror. Him the huge abyss engulfs, and swallows the horses as he drops neither reins they try to leap across it nor weapons, but, just as he was, drove his unshaken chariot down to Tartarus, and as he sank looked back at the heavens and groaned to see the plain meet above him, vmtil a fainter shock joined once more the parted fields and shut out the dayUght from befall, all look to their
bids
all
their swords
—
I
;
Avemus.
193
LIBER
VIII
Ut subitus vates pallentibus incidit umbris letiferasque domos orbisque^ arcana sepulti rupit et armato turbavit funere manes, horror habet cunctos, Stygiis mirantur in oris tela et equos corpusque movum ; nee enim ignibus 5 artus conditus aut maesta niger adventabat ab urna, sed belli sudore calens, clipeumque cruentis roribus et scissi respersus pulvere campi. needum ilium aut trunca lustraverat obvia taxo 10 Eumenis, aut furvo^ Proserpina poste notarat coetibus adsumptum funetis ; quin comminus ipsa Fatorum deprensa
paventes stamina Parcae. ilium et securi circumspexere fragorem Elysii, et si quos procul ulteriore^ barathro altera nox aliisque gravat plaga caeca tenebris. tunc regemunt pigrique lacus ustaeque^ paludes, umbriferaeque fremit sulcator pallidus undae dissiluisse novo penitus telluris hiatu Tartara et admissos non per sua flumina manes,
augure tunc
^
orbisque w
regisque P.
:
' *
"
194
colus, visoque
demum rumpebant
Both appear
^
P
furvo w
:
fulvo
15
20
PS.
ulteriore inferiore w. ustae Schol. : vastae a». :
P
to
be modes of
initiation to
the under-
BOOK
VIII
When' on a sudden the prophet fell among the pallid shades, and burst into the homes of death and the mysteries of the deep-sunken realm, and affrighted the ghosts ^^ith his armed corpse, all were filled with horror and marvelled at the weapons and horses and the body still undecayed upon the Stygian shores for no fires had whelmed his limbs, nor came he charred from the gloomy urn, but hot with the sweat of war, and gory drops and the dust of the rent plain beflecked his shield. Not yet had the Fury met and purified him with branch of yew, not had Proserpine marked him on the dusky door-post as admitted to the company of the dead" nay, his presence surprised the ver}- distaff of the Fates, and not till in terror they :
;
beheld the augur did the Parcae break the thread. At the noise of his coming the care-free Elysian folk gazed round about them, and they whom far in the remoter gulf a deeper night and a blind region of denser shades o'envhelms. Then sluggish meres and scorched lakes resound with groaning, and the pale furrower of the ghost-bearing stream cries out that a new chasm has cloven Tartarus to its depths and spirits have been let in across a river not his own. world, though nowhere else mentioned as such. The yew belonged specially to Furies, «•/. xi. 94. " furvus " is an epithet suitable to the underworld, cf. Silv. v. 1. 155.
195
ST ATI us Forte sedens media regni infelicis in arce dux Erebi populos poscebat crimina vitae, nil hominum miserans iratusque omnibus umbris stant Furiae circum variaeque ex ordine Mortes, saevaque multisonas exsertat Poena catenas 25 Fata ferunt animas et eodem pollice damnant vincit opus, iuxta Minos cum fratre verendo iura bonus meliora monet regemque cruentum temperat adsistunt lacrimis atque igne tumentes Cocytos Phlegethonque, et Styx periuria divum 30 arguit. ille autem supera compage soluta nee solitus sentire metus expavit oborta sidera, iucundaque ofFensus luce profatur " quae superum labes inimicum impegit Averno 35 aethera ? quis rupit tenebras vitaeque silentes admonet ? unde minae^ ? uter haec mihi proelia fratrum ? congredior, pereant agedum discrimina rerum. nam cui dulce magis ? magno me tertia victum deiecit Fortuna polo, mundumque nocentem 40 servo nee iste meus dirisque en pervius astris tumidusne meas regnator Olympi inspicitur. explorat vires ? habeo iam quassa Gigantum vincula et aetherium cupidos exire sub axem Titanas miserumque patrem quid me otia maesta 45 saevus et implacidam prohibet perferre quietem ;
:
;
:
:
:
^ minae ui mina P, minas Baehrens. Statius allows, occasionally, a short syllable at this point in the line, cf. iii. 710, also, very rarely, hiatus. :
" Literally " thumb," with which the crowd in the amphitheatre saved or condemned the gladiators who appealed for
mercy. *
An
oath sworn by Styx was inviolable, and Styx could see Hesiod, Theog. 784, where any ;
therefore punish perjury
196
THEBAID,
VIII. 21-45
Bv chance the lord of Erebus, enthroned in the midst of the fortress of his dolorous realm, was demanding of his subjects the misdoings of their hves, pitying nought human but ^vToth against all the shades. Around him stand the Furies and various Deaths in order due, and savage Vengeance thrusts the Fates bring forth her coils of jangling chains too the souls and \\"ith one gesture " damn them heavv grows the work. Hard bv, Minos with his dread brother in kindly mood counsels a milder justice, and Cocytus and Phlegerestrains the bloodthirsty king thon, swollen ^^ith tears and fire, aid in the judgement, and Styx accuses the gods of perjurj-.* But he,'' when the frame of the world above was loosened and filled him with unwonted fears, quaked at the appearing stars, and thus did he speak, offended by " What ruin of the upper world the gladsome light hath thrust the hateful light of day into Avernus ? Who hath burst our gloom and told the silent folk of hfe ? Whence comes this threat ? Which of my brothers thus makes war on me ? Well, I Mill meet ;
;
;
:
confusion whelm all natural bounds For would that please more ? the third hazard hurled me defeated from the mighty heaven, and 1 guard the world of guilt nor is even that mine, but lo the dread stars search it from end to end, and gaze upon me. Does the proud ruler of Olympus
him
:
!
whom
;
!
spy out my strength ? Mine is the prison-house, now broken, of the Giants, and of the Titans, eager to force their way to the world above, and his own unhappy sire why thus cruelly doth he forbid me to enjoy my moiu-nful leisure and this untranquil peace, :
god who is guilty of such perjurj- is debarred for nine years from the
company
of the gods.
'
i.e.,
Pluto, " lord of Erebus."
197
STATIUS amissumque
diem ? pandani omnia regna, praetexam Hyperiona caelo. quid enim mihi nuntius ambas itque reditque domos ? emittam et utrumque tenebo Tyndariden. cur autem avidis Ixiona frango 50 verticibus ? cur non exspectant Tantalon undae ? anne profanatum totiens chaos hospite vivo odisse
placet, et Stygio Arcada nee superis si
perpetiar
me
?
—
—
Pirithoi temerarius ardor
temptat et audaci Theseus iuratus amico, 55 me ferus Alcides, tunc cum custode remote ferrea Cerbereae tacuerunt Umina portae Odrysiis etiam pudet heu patuisse querelhs Tartara vidi egomet blanda inter carmina turpes Eumenidum lacrimas iterataque pensa Sororum 60 me quoque sed durae mehor violentia legis. ast ego vix unum, nee celsa ad sidera, furto ;
!
:
;
—
ausus iter Siculo rapui conubia campo nee hcuisse ferunt iniustaeque a love leges protinus, et sectum genetrix mihi computat annum, sed quid ego haec ? i, Tartareas ulciscere sedes, 65 Tisiphone si quando novis asperrima monstris, triste, insuetum, ingens, quod nondum viderit aether, ede nefas, quod mirer ego invideantque Sorores. atque adeo fratres nostrique haec omina sunto 70 prima odii fratres alterna in vulnera laeto Marte ruant sit, qui rabidarum more ferarum :
;
;
—
—
,
;
" "The Arcadian " is Mercury, messenger of the gods and conductor of souls to Hades. The sons of Tyndareus, Castor and Pollux, enjoyed an alternate immortality, one being in heaven while the other was in Hades. * Of Orpheus ; " Odrysian " =Thracian. The task of the Sisters was repeated, for Eurydice's thread had to be spun anew if she was allowed to return to life. * Demeter, whose daughter Persephone was carried off by
198
THEBAID,
VIII. 46-71
and to hate the light I lost ? I will open all my kingdoms, if such be my pleasure, and veil Hj-perion with a Stygian sky. I will not send the Arcadian up to the gods why doth he come and go on errands between realm and realm ? and I will keep both the sons of Tyndareus." And why do I break Ixion on the greedy whirhng of the wheel ? Whv do the waters not wait for Tantalus ? Must I so oft endure the profanation of Chaos by h\ing strangers ? The rash ardour of Pirithous provoked me, and Theseus, sworn comrade of his daring friend, and fierce Alcides, when the iron threshold of Cerberus' gate fell silent, its guardian removed. It shames me too, alas how Tartarus opened a way to the Odrysian plaint ^ with my own eyes I saw the Eumenides shed base
—
—
I
;
tears at those persuasive strains, and the Sisters repeat their allotted task ; me too , but the \iolence of my cruel law was stronger. Yet I have scarce
—
ventured one stolen journey, nor was that to the stars on high, when I carried off my bride from the Sicilian mead unlawfully, so they say, and forthwith comes an unjust decree from Jove, and her :
mother tell
:
175
sinistri
in extis, utilis
ferarum P.
be an ethic dative here.
armis,
;
THEBAID, MIL
153-179
terrors, reports that more than one have perished. Unbidden, not awaiting the wonted bugle-call that sounds retreat, the troops take to headlong flight but their movement is sluggish, their knees fail their eager haste the horn-footed steeds themselves one would think they knew resist them, and stubbornly defy e\ery command, whether to hasten pace or More valiantly the lift their eyes from earth. Tyrians press on, but dark ^'esper is already leading ;
—
—
forth the horses of the moon ; a scant truce brings the warriors sad repose, and night that will but in-
crease their fears. How looks it now, think you," when groans are granted their fill ? How fell the tears from the loosened hehns ? Nought customary delights the weary warriors ; they cast down their dripping shields, just as they were, none ^iped his spear, or praised his charger, or dressed and decked the plume scarce do they care to wash of his polished helm their grievous wounds, and stitch up the wide-gaping blows so great the despair of ever}' heart. Nor could the fear of battle persuade them to take food and all sing of thy praises, due sustenance for war Amphiaraus, and of thy mind, unfaiHng oracle of truth one speech is heard throughout the tents that the gods have left them, and their protection the is departed from the camp. " Where, alas ;
:
:
:
;
!
laurelled chariot and the sacred arms and filletbearing crest ? Is this the faith of Castahan lake and grotto, and holy tripod ? Is this Apollo's gratitude ? Who now shall explain to me the falling of stars, or the purpose of lightning on the left, or the ^^^ll divine that leaps in the new-slain entrails ? or when to march or tany^ what hour is profitable
207
— ST ATI us quae pacem magis hora velit ? quis iam omne futurum cum quo volucres mea fata loquentur ? hos quoque bellorum casus nobisque tibique praescieras, et quanta sacro sub pectore virtus venisti tamen et miseris comes additus armis. proferet, aut
—
!
185 et cum te tellus fatalisque hora vocaret, tu Tyrias acies adversaque signa vacasti sternere tunc etiam media de morte timendum hostibus infestaque abeuntem vidimus hasta. et nunc te quis casus habet ? poterisne reverti 190 sedibus a Stygiis altaque erumpere terra ? anne sedes hilares iuxta tua numina Parcas et vice concordi discis ventura docesque ? an tibi felices lucos miseratus Averni rector et Elysias dedit inservare volucres ? quidquid es, aeternus Phoebo dolor et nova clades 195 semper eris mutisque diu plorabere Delphis. hie Tenedon Chrysenque^ dies partuque ligatam Delon et intonsi cludet penetralia Branchi, nee Clarias hac luce fores Didymaeaque quisquam 200 limina nee Lyciam supplex consultor adibit. quin et cornigeri vatis nemus atque Molosso quercus anhela lovi Troianaque Thymbra tacebit. ipsi amnes ipsaeque volent^ arescere laurus, ipse nihil certum sagis^ clangoribus aether ;
^
^
chrisenque P chrysamque BQ cyrrhamque w. ipsaeque volent cj ipsaeque viae mallent P :
:
:
malent Postgate. * sagis w sacis S :
:
sacris
:
ipsae
P.
" Here, as in the well-known passage from Milton's Ode on the Nativity, "the oracles are dumb." The " bringingforth " (1. 197) is that of Apollo and Diana. * Tenedos and Chrj'sa were both sacred to Apollo he had an oracle at Claros and at Miletus (that of Branchus, son ;
208
— THEBAID,
VIII. 180-204
for battle, or rather calls for
peace
?
Who now
shall
the future, or with whom shall birds hold converse of my destiny ? The chances of this war thou knewest also, both for thyself and us, and yet how great the courage in that inspired breast thou earnest and didst join our ill-fated arms. And when the earth and thy fatal hour called thee, thou hadst time to lay low the Tyrian lines and hostile standards then even in the midst of death we saw thee a terror to the foe, and thy spear still threatening as thou didst depart. And now what fate befalls thee ? Wilt thou be able to return from the abodes of Styx, and break forth from the depths of earth ? Or sittest thou beside the glad Parcae, thine own deities, and by harmonious interchange dost learn and teach the future ? Or hath the lord of Avernus in pity granted thee to watch Elysian birds in the groves of the blest ? Whatever thou art, an eternal grief to Phoebus shalt thou be, and a loss that is ever new, and long shalt thou be mourned by a Delphi that is dumb." This day shall silence Tenedos and Chryse, and Delos, made fast for the bringing-forth, and unshorn Branchus' shrine, nor on this day shall any suppliant draw nigh to the Clarian temple-gates, nor to the threshold of Dindymus, nor consult the Lycian god.** Nay, the precinct also of the horned prophet and the panting oak of Molossian Jove and Trojan Thymbra shall be mute."^ The very streams and laurels shall of their own will fail and wither, the air itself shall utter no certain presage in prophetic lay bare
all
—
I
;
of i%p©llo), also in Lycia (Patara), and at Didyma, near Miletus. * Temple of Zeus Ammon in Libya, of Zeus at Dodona, of Apollo at Thymbra.
VOL.
II
p
209
STATIUS praecinet, et nulla fei'ientur ab alite nubes.
205
iamque erit ille dies, quo te quoque conscia fatis templa colant reddatque tuus responsa sacerdos." talia fatidico peragunt soUemnia regi, ceu flammas ac dona rogo tristesque rependant exsequias mollique
animam
tellure reponant.
fracta dehinc cunctis aversaque pectora bello
210 :
Minyas subito cum funere Tiphys non arma sequi, non ferre videtur remus aquas, ipsique minus iam ducere venli. iam fessi gemitu, paulatim et corda levavit exhaustus sermone dolor, nox addita curas sic fortes
destituit,
215
obruit et facilis lacrimis inrepere somnus. At non Sidoniam diversa in parte per urbem nox eadem vario producunt sidera ludo :
ante domos intraque, ipsaeque ad moenia marcent 220 excubiae gemina aera sonant Idaeaque terga et moderata sonum vario spiramine buxus. tunc dulces superos atque omne ex ordine alumnum numen ubique sacri resonant paeanes, ubique serta coronatumque merum. nunc funera rident 225 auguris ignari, contraque in tempore certant Tiresian laudare suum nunc facta revolvunt maiorum veteresque canunt ab origine Thebas hi mare Sidonium manibusque adtrita Tonantis cornua et ingenti sulcatum Nerea tauro, 230 hi Cadmum lassamque bovem fetosque cruenti Martis agros, alii Tyriam reptantia saxa ;
;
:
9 "
i.e., it is
rudder, ''
210
repugnant to them.
ropes, etc. in the worship of
By
the tackling he
means
sails,
Used
Cybele by Mt. Ida in Phrygia.
THEBAID,
VIII. 205-231
and no wing of bird shall beat the clouds. And soon shall come the day, when thou too shalt be worshipped by truth-inspired shrines, and thy own Such solemn chant do priest impart thy oracles." they make in honour of the prophet-prince, as though they were paying the due of flame and gifts and mournful service to the pyre, and laying the soul to rest in the soft earth. Then broken were the spirits of all, with loathing for the war even so when sudden death snatched Tiphys from the brave Minyae, no longer seems the tackling to obey, no longer the oars to endure the water,*^ and even the breezes drew the vessel with less power. And now were they wearied of weeping, and having mourned their fill in converse, their hearts were lightened little by little, till sorrow was drowned in the approach of night and sleep that gently steals o'er tearful eyes. But elsewhere, throughout the Sidonian city, far different was that night in various sport before their houses and within they spend the hours of darkness, and even the sentinels on the walls are tipsy cymbals and the Idaean drums * resound, and the pipe that makes its music by varied breathing. Then in honour of their darling gods and every native deity in order sacred paeans everywhere swell high, everywhere are garlands seen and wreathed bowls of \\'ine. Now mock they the witless augur's death, and again they vie in praising their o'wn Tiresias now they tell the history of their sires, and sing from its beginnings the ancient tale of Thebes some tell of the Sidonian sea and the hands that grasped the Thunderer's horns and the mighty bull that ploughed the deep, others of Cadmus and the weary heifer and the fields pregnant with bloody war, others again of cries,
:
;
;
;
:
211
— STATIUS ad chelyn et duras animantem Amphiona cautes, gravidam Semelen, illi Cythereia laudant conubia et multa deductam lampade fratrum 235 hi
Harmoniam nullis iam deest^ sua fabula mensis. ceu modo gemmiferum thyrso populatus Hydaspen :
Eoasque domos
nigri vexilla triumpJii
Liber et ignotos populis ostenderet Indos. Tuncprimumadcoetus sociaeque ad foedera mensae semper inaspectum diraque in sede latentem 241 Oedipoden exisse ferunt vultuque sereno canitiem nigram squalore et sordida fusis ora comis laxasse manu sociumque benignos adfatus et abacta prius solacia passum, 245 quin hausisse dapes insiccatumque cruorem deiecisse genis. cunctos auditque refertque, qui Ditem et Furias tantum et si quando regentem Antigonen maestis solitus pulsare querellis. causa latet. non hunc Tyrii fors prospera belli, 250 tantum bella iuvant natum hortaturque probatque, nee vicisse velit sed primos comminus enses et sceleris tacito rimatur semina voto. ;
;
inde epulae dulees ignotaque gaudia vultu. qualis post longae Phineus ieiunia poenae, 255 nil stridere domi volucres ut sensit abactas necdum tota fides hilaris mensasque torosque nee turbata feris tractavit pocula pinnis. Cetera Graiorum curis armisque iacebat fessa cohors alto castrorum ex aggere Adrastus 260 laetificos tenui captabat corde tumultus,
—
;
D
deest P^ -que deest C defit, non est suavis Garrod, but Statms may have lengthened tlie first syllable, cf. ii. 551, vi. 519, x. 236, xi. 276. *
iam deest
edd.
"
:
:
:
:
He was
a king in Thrace, who was plagued by Harpies, the food from his table.
who snatched away 212
THEBAID, the boulders that
moved
VIII. 232-260 to the music of the rocks to life ;
Tynan
these celebrate the travail of Semele, those the Cytherean nuptials and the train of brothers' torches that led every table has its story. Harmonia to her home 'Tis as though Liber of late had ravaged Hydaspes rich in gems and the kingdoms of the East, and were displaying to the folk the banners of his swarthy captive-train ahd Indians yet unknown. Then for the first time Oedipus, who ever lurked unseen in his dread abode, came forth, they say, to the friendly gatherings of the social banquet, and, serene of countenance, freed his grey hairs from their black filth and his face from unkempt straying locks, and enjoyed the kindly converse of his fellows and the solace denied before, nay, partook of the feast and wiped the undried blood from his eyes. To all he listens and to all he makes reply, who was wont but to assail viith sad complaint Dis and the Furies and They know not the cause. his guide Antigone. 'Tis not the prosperous issue of the Tj-rian war, but war alone delights him ; he encourages and approves liis son, yet would not have him win but he searches for the first clash of swords and the seeds of guilt with prayers unspoken. Thence his pleasure in the feast and the strange joy upon his face. Even so did Phineus,*" after the long fast that was his punishment, when he knew the birds were driven away nor lute
and Amphion
stirring
;
;
—
screamed any more about his house yet beheved he not wholly, recline hilarious at the board, and handle the cups that no fierce wings upset. The rest of the Grecian host lay fordone with care and battle from a high mound in the camp Adrastus frail now and old, but forced by the curse of power
—
—
;
213
;
STATIUS quamquam
aeger senio, sed agit miseranda- potestas ilium aereus undique clamor Thebanique urunt sonitus, et amara lacessit 265 tibia, turn nimio voces marcore superbae incertaeque faces et iam male pervigil ignis. sic ubi per fluctus uno ratis obruta somno conticuit, pacique^ maris secura inventus mandavere animas solus stat puppe magister 270 pervigil inscriptaque deus qui navigat'alno. Tempus erat, iunctos cum iam soror ignea Phoebi sensit equos penitusque cavam sub luce parata Oceani mugire domum, seseque vagantem 274 colligit et leviter moto fugat astra flagello concilium rex triste vocat, quaeruntque gementes, invigilare malis.
:
:
quis tripodas successor agat, quo provida^ laurus transeat atque orbum vittae decus. baud mora, cuncti
insignem fama sanctoque Melampode cretum Thiodamanta volunt, quicum ipse arcana deorum 280
partiri et visas uni sociare solebat
Amphiaraus aves, tantaeque baud invidus artis gaudebat dici similem iuxtaque secundum, ilium ingens confundit honos inopinaque turbat gloria et oblatas frondes submissus adorat, seque oneri negat esse parem cogique meretur
:
285
Achaemenius solium gentesque paternas excepit si forte puer, cui vivere patrem
sicut
tutjus, incerta formidine
gaudia
librat,
tantique Pa', but some dat. Is needed for the verb ; it is impossible to understand somno, as Klotz. " provida Peyrared prodita u. prodigia
pacique Postgate
^
:
:
" cf.
P
:
The image of the god stood in the stern of the ship "pictos verberat unda deos," Ov. Tr. i. 4. 8.
*
21 +
Persian.
THEBAID,
VIII. 261-287
—
to be M'atchful against disaster heard with sinking heart the shouts of the merrymakers. From all sides the clamour of bronze and Theban uproar gall him, and the pipe grates harshly on his ears, he is vexed by the insolent shouts of the drunken and the flickering torches and the fires already scarce lasting out the night. So when upon the waves a ship is whelmed in the silence of universal sleep, and the crew in careless trust commend their lives to the
peace of ocean, alone upon the poop stands the \igilant helmsman and the god who sails in the bark that bears his name." It was the time when Phoebus' fierj- sister, hearing the sound of his yoked steeds and the roar of Ocean's cavernous abode beneath the gathering dawn, collects her straying beams and with light flick of whip chases the stars away the king calls the doleful council, and in dismay they ask who shall take up the duty of the tripod, to whom shall pass the prescient laurel and the widowed glory of the fillet. Straightway all demand holy Melampus' son, Thiodamas of high reno^vn, with whom alone Amphiaraus' self was wont to share the mysteries of the gods and view the flying birds, nor grudged him so much skill, but rejoiced to hear him called his hke and nearest rival. Overwhelmed by the high honour and confounded by the unlooked-for glory he hxmibly reverences the proffered leaves, and pleads that he is unequal to the task, and must needs for his merit be constrained even as when perchance a young Achaemenian * prince has succeeded to the throne and all his father's realms (though safer were it for him that his sire still lived), his delight he balances with uncertain fear, whether his chiefs be 215 :
:
:
STATIUS an
fidi
proceres, ne pugnet volgus habenis,
cui latus Euphratae, cui Caspia limina
mandet
;
290
sumere tunc arcus ipsumque onerare veretur patris equum, visusque sibi nee seeptra capaci sustentare manu nee adhuc implere tiaram.
Atque is ubi intorto signatus vellere crinem convenitque dels, hilari per castra tumultu vadit ovans ac, prima sui documenta, sacerdos Tellurem placare parat nee futile maestis geminas ergo ilicet aras id visum Danais.
295
:
arboribus vivis et adulto caespite texi imperat, innumerosque deae, sua munera, flores 300 et cumulos frugum et quicquid novat impiger annus addit et intacto spargens altaria lacte " o hominum divomque aeterna creatrix, incipit :
animarum et semina mundo cuncta Prometheasque manus Pyrrhaeaque saxa 305 gignis, et impastis quae prima alimenta dedisti mutastique^ viris,^ quae pontum ambisque vehisque te penes et pecudum gens mitis et ira ferarum firmum atque immobile mundi et voluorum requies robur inoccidui, te velox machina caeli 310 aere pendentem vacuo, te currus uterque quae
fluvios silvasque
;
circuit, o
rerum media indivisaque magnis
ergo simul tot gentibus alma, tot altis urbibus ac populis, subterque ac desuper una fratribus
!
^
mutastique w ^
viris
P
: :
multatisque P. viros w.
" i.e., the race of men. According to one story Prometheus created men, cf. Ov. Met. 1. 82 according to another he endued them with soul, as in Hor. C. i. 16. 13. * " Either chariot," /.«., of sun and moon. "The brethren," ;
216
THEBAID,
VIII. 288-314
whether the folk -w-ill fight against the reins, to whom he shall entrust the frontier of Euphrates or the Caspian gate ; then does he feel awe to wield the bow and to mount his sire's own steed, nor can he see himself upholding the sceptre with large grasp nor as yet filling the diadem. He therefore ha\-ing set upon his locks the emblem of the t\\'isted wool and held intercourse with the gods, proceeds in triumph through the camp amid shouts of joy, and, first evidence of his priestly office, prepares to appease the Earth nor seemed it vain to the sorrowing Danaans. Therefore he straightway bids altars twain be "WTeathed ^ith living trees and well-grown turf, and on them, in lionour of the goddess, he flings countless flowers, her own bounty, and heaps of fruit and the new produce of the tireless year, and pouring untouched milk upon the " altars he thus begins eternal Creatress of gods and men, who bringest into being rivers and forests and seeds of life throughout the world, the handiwork of Prometheus and the stones of Pyrrha," thou who first didst give nourishment and varied food to famished men, who dost encompass and bear up the sea ; in
loyal,
:
:
O
thy power
is the gentle race of cattle and the anger of ^\ild beasts and the repose of birds round thee, firm, steadfast strength of the unfailing universe, as thou hangest in the empty air the rapid frame of heaven and either chariot doth wheel, O middle of the world, unshared by the mighty brethren ^ Therefore art thou bountiful to so many races, so many lofty cities and peoples, while from above ;
!
and from beneath thou Jupiter, Neptune as their portions,
art all-sufficient,
and
>^'ith
no
and Pluto, took air, sea, and underworld and left the earth common to all.
217
STATIUS sufficis,
astriferumque donios Atlanta supernas
ferre laborantem nullo vehis ipsa labore
315
:
nos tantum portare negas, nos, diva, gravaris ? ? an quia plebes
quod, precor, ignari luimus scelus
externa Inachiis hue adventamus ab
omne homini
oris
?
natale solum, nee te, optima, saevo 320
tamque humili populos deceat distinguere fine undique ubique tuos maneas communis et arma ;
hinc atque inde feras
;
liceat, precor, ordine belli
pugnaces efflare animas et reddere caelo. 325 ne rape tam subitis spirantia corpora bustis, ne propera veniemus enim, quo limite cuncti, qua licet ire via tantum exorata Pelasgis siste levem campum, celeres neu praecipe Parcas. at tu, care deis, quern non manus ulla nee enses 330 Sidonii, sed magna sinu Natura soluto, ceu te Cirrhaeo meritum tumularet hiatu, :
;
sic
amplexa
coit, hilaris des, oro,
precatus
nosse tuos, caeloque et vera monentibus aris
quae populis proferre parabas, 335 tibi sacra feram praesaga, tuique numinis interpres te Phoebo absente vocabo. ille mihi Delo Cirrhaque potentior omni, quo ruis, ille adytis melior locus." haec ubi dicta, nigrantis terrae pecudes obscuraque mergit 340 armenta, ac vivis cumulos undantis harenae concilies, et
me
doceas
:
aggerat et vati mortis simulacra rependit. Talia apud Graios, cum iam Mavortia contra "
218
i.e.,
performing the
ritual of a real funeral.
THEBAID, effort
VIII. 315-342
who
earnest thyself star-bearing Atlas
staggers
under the weight of the celestial realm us alone, Doth our goddess, dost thou refuse to bear ? weight vex thee ? What crime, I pray, do we unwitThat we come hither, a stranger folk, tingly atone ? from Inachian shores ? All soil is human birthright, nor doth it beseem thee, worthiest one, to distinguish by a test so cruel and so mean peoples who are everyabide thou where and in every land thine own common to all aUke, and bear ahke the arms of all grant us, I pray, in war's due course to breathe out our warrior souls and restore them to the sky. Whelm not in burial so sudden our still-breathing bodies haste not, for we shall come by the path all tread, by the permitted way hearken but to our prayer, and keep firm for the Pelasgians the fickle plain, and But thou, dear to the forestall not the swift Fates. gods, whom no violence nor Sidonian sword did slay, but mighty Nature opened her bosom to enfold in union with herself, as though for thy merits she were entombing thee in Cirrha's chasm, gladly vouchsafe, 1 pray, that I may learn thy supplications, conciliate me to the gods and the prophetic altars, and teach me what thou didst design to tell the peoples I will perform thy rites of divination, and in Phoebus' absence be the prophet of thy godhead and call upon thy name. That place whither thou speedest is mightier, I ween, than any Delos or Cirrha, and more august than any shrine." Having thus spoken he casts into the ground black sheep and dark-hued herds, and piles up heaps of billowy sand on their living bodies, duly paying to the seer the emblems of death." Such things were happening among the Greeks, when already yonder the Martial horns were heard, 219 ;
:
;
;
;
;
STATIUS cornua, iam saevos fragor aereus excitat enses. addit acerba sonum Teumesi e vertice crinem incutiens acuitque tubas et sibila miscet 345 Tisiphone stupet insolito clangore Cithaeron marcidus et turres carmen non tale secutae. iam trepidas Bellona fores armataque pulsat limina, iam multo laxantur eardine Thebae. 349 turbat eques pedites, currus properantibus obstant, ecu Danai post terga premant sic omnibus alae artantur portis septemque excursibus haerent. Ogygiis it sorte Creon, Eteoclea mittunt Neistae, celsas Homoloidas occupat Haemon, Hypsea Proetiae,^ celsum fudere Dryanta 355 Electrae, quatit Hypsistas manus Eurymedontis, :
:
culmina magnanimus stipat Dircaea Menoeceus. qualis ubi aversi secretus pabula caeli Nilus et Eoas magno bibit ore pruinas, scindit fontis opes septemque patentibus arvis 360 in mare fert hiemes penitus cessere fugatae Nereides dulcique timent occurrere ponto. Tristis at inde gradum tarde movet Inacha pubes, praecipue Eleae Lacedaemoniaeque cohortes 365 subitum nam Thiodamanta secuntur et Pylii augure fraudati, necdum accessere regenti. nee tua te, princeps tripodum, sola agmina quaerunt cuncta phalanx sibi deesse putat minor ille per alas Septimus exstat apex, liquido velut aethere nubes ;
;
:
;
^
Proetiae
Pw
:
Proetides et
Lachmann
:
Proetiadae
(-es)
edd.
when they were built to the music of Amphion's lyre. Statius seems to think of the East as cold, very much as Scythia (S. Russia) is spoken of as a region of frost and snow ; here he is thinking vaguely, perhaps, of the Persian " *
220
i.e.,
THEBAID,
VIII. 343-369
and the blare of bronze drew sheaths.
fierce
swords from their
From Teuraesus' height Tisiphone sends
shrill cry. and shakes her locks, and with their hissing adds a sharpness to the trumpets' note ; drunken Cithaeron and the towers that followed a far different music " listen in amaze to the unwonted din.
her
Already Bellona is beating at the trembling gates and the armed portals, already by many a doorway Thebes is emptying fast. Horsemen set infantry in disarray, chariots delay the hurrying troops, as though the Danaans urged their rear thus at the issues of all the seyen gates the crowded columns are stuck fast. Creon goes out by lot from the Ogygian, the Neistae send forth Eteocles, Haemon guards the lofty Homoloian, the Proetian and Electran pour forth the men of H^'pseus and tall Dry as, the troops of Eurymedon make the Hypsistae shake, greathearted Menoeceus crowds the Dircean battlements. Eyen so, when Nile in his secret region has drunk ^yith mighty mouth the nurture of a distant sky and the cold snows of the East,^ he breaks up all his wealth of waters and carries his tempests to the sea in seyen ^yide channels o'er the fields the routed Nereids take refuge in the depths, and fear to meet the saltless main. But sad and slow moye yonder the Inachian warriors, especially the cohorts of Elis and Lacedaemon, and they of Pylos robbed of their augur they follow the late-appointed Thiodamas, not yet assenting to his command. Nor is it only thy own ranks that :
;
;
miss thee, lord of the tripods all the host feels its less gloriously along the hne rises that seyenth crest. 'Tis as though a jealous cloud were to snatch :
loss
:
highlands. In poetry rivers are commonly referred to as being swollen by rain and melting snow,
221
STATIUS invida Parrhasiis iinum
si
detrahat
370
astris,
truncus honor Plaustri, nee idem riget^ igne reciso
rmmerant sua sidera nautae. alias nova suggere vires, Calliope, maiorque chelyn mihi tendat Apollo, 375 fatalem populis ultro poscentibus horam admovet atra dies, Stygiisque emissa tenebris Mors fruitur caelo bellatoremque volando axis, et incerti
Sad iam
bella vocant
:
campum
operit nigroque viros invitat hiatu,^ vulgare legens, sed quae dignissima vita funera, praecipuos annis animisque cruento nil
ungue^ notat Sororum
;
iamque
in
miseros
380
pensum onine
scinditur, et Furiae rapuerunt licia Parcis.
medius campis etiamnum cuspide sicca iamque hos clipeum, iam vertit ad arma ciens, aboletque domos, conubia, natos.
stat
Bellipotens,
pellitur et patriae et, qui
mente novissimus
illos
amor tenet in capulis hastisque paratas manus animusque ultra thoracas anhelus * conatur, galeaeque tremunt horrore comarum. quid mirum caluisse viros ? flammantur in hostem lucis
385
exit,
;
ira
390
cornipedes niveoque rigant sola putria nimbo, corpora ceu mixti dominis irasque sedentum induerint sic frena terunt, sic proelia poscunt :
hinnitu tolluntque armos equitesque supinant.
^
riget
P
nitet w.
:
D
(hiatu written over), conversely B, hiatu Pu • amictu hence Wakefield conj. investit amictu. ' ungue Barth, Bentley : angue Pw. *
*
222
animus
.
.
.
anhelus w
:
-os
.
.
.
-os P.
— THEBAID,
VIII. 370-394
from the clear sky one of the Parrhasian cluster " spoiled is the glory of the Wain, the axle wavers, shorn of one fire, and the seamen count their stars in doubt.
me from a fresh source, vigour, and may a mightier The day of doom brings Apollo attune my lyre nigh to the peoples the fatal hour of their own asking, and Death let loose from Stygian darkness exults But already battle
calls
:
new
Calliope, supply
!
and hovers in flight over the of battle, and with black jaws gaping wide innought vulgar doth he choose, but vites the heroes with bloody nail marks as victims those most worthy and now all of life, in the prime of years or valour the Sisters' strands are broken for the wretched men, and the Furies have snatched the threads from the Fates. In the midst of the plain stands the War-god with spear yet dry, and turns his shield now against these, now against those, stirring up the fray and Love of blotting out home and wife and child. country is driven out, and love of the light, that lingers latest in the heart rage holds their hands all ready on the sword-hilt and on the lance, the panting spirit strives beyond its corslet, and the helmets tremble beneath the quivering plumes. What wonder that the heroes are hot for battle ? Hornfooted steeds are inflamed against the foe and bedew the crumbling earth with a snow-white shower, as in the air of heaven, field
;
;
;
though they were made one in body with their masters, and had put on their riders' rage so champ they the bits, and neigh to join the fight, and rearing toss the horsemen backward. :
"
The Great Bear which has seven
stars
;
see note
on
vii. 8.
223
STATIUS lamque ruunt, primusque virum concurrere incipit, et spatiis
utrimque aequalibus
pulvis
396
acti
adventant mediumque vident decrescere campum.
iam
clipeus clipeis,
umbone
repellitur
umbo,
ense minax ensis, pede pes et cuspide cuspis sic obnixa acies pariter suspiria fumant,
:
;
400
admotaeque nitent aliena in casside cristae. pulcher adhuc belli vultus stant vertice coni, plena armenta viris, nulli sine praeside currus, arma loco, splendent clipei pharetraeque decorae :
cingulaque et
nondum deforme
cruoribus aurum. 405
postquam rabies et vitae prodiga virtus eniisere animos, non tanta cadentibus Haedis aeriam Rhodopen solida nive verberat Arctos, nee fragor Ausoniae tantus, cum luppiter omni at
arce tonat, tanta quatitur nee grandine Syrtis, cum Libyae Boreas Italos niger attulit imbres. exclusere diem telis, stant ferrea caelo nubila, nee iaculis artatus sufficit aer.
410
hi pereunt missis, illi redeuntibus hastis, concurrunt per inane sudes et mutua perdunt 415 volnera, concurrunt hastae, stridentia funda saxa pluunt, volucres imitantur fulgura glandes et formidandae non una morte sagittae. nee locus ad terram telis in corpora ferrum omne cadit saepe ignari perimuntque caduntque. 421 casus agit virtutis opus nunc turba recedit, nunc premit, ac vicibus tellurem amittit et aufert. ut ventis nimbisque minax cum solvit habenas :
;
:
" A strange phrase, which seems intended to present the scene both to eye and ear. * i.e.. Hung back again, as in 1. 435. " i.e., from their poison as well as their sharpness, or
224
THEBAID,
VIII. 395-423
And now they charge, and the first dust-clouds of the heroes begin to meet the onset both sides dash forward an equal space, and see the intervening plain diminish. Then shield thrusts against shield, boss upon boss, threatening sword on sword, foot against foot and lance on lance in such close struggle they meet together their groans reek," close-packed crests gleam over helmets not their own. The face of battle is still fair plumes stand erect, horsemen bestride their steeds, no chariot is without its chief weapons are in their place, shields glitter, quivers and belts are comely, and gold as yet unsightly "\\ith blood. But when fury and valour prodigal of life give rein to passion, Arctos lashes not airy Rhodope so fiercely with hardened snow when the Kids are falling, nor does Ausonia hear so loud an uproar when Jupiter thunders from end to end of heaven, nor are the Syrtes beaten mth such hail, when dark Boreas hurls Italian tempests upon Libya. Their darts shut out the day, a steely cloud hangs athwart the sky, and the crowded air has no room for all the javelins. Some perish by flung spears, others by spears returning,* stakes meet in the void and rob each other of the wounds they carry, spears meet, and stones rain hissing from the slings, swift bullets, and dread arrows \Wnged ^v^th a double death rival the lightning-stroke. No place for weapons earthward, every dart falls on a body often they slay and are slain unwitting. Chance does the work of valour now the press retires and now advances, loses ground in turn and wins it. Even so when threatening Jove has loosed the reins of winds and tempests, and sends
m
;
:
;
:
;
'^
;
:
perhaps by hyperbole their power to ii.
637,
VOL.
viii.
II
kill
two together,
cf.
538.
Q
225
—
—
STATIUS luppiter alternoque adfligit turbine
mundum
:
425 nunc fortior Austri, nunc Aquilonis hiemps, donee pugnante procella
stat caeli diversa acies,
aut nimiis hie vieit aquis, aut ille sereno. Principium pugnae turmas Asopius Hypseus Oebalias
—namque hae magnum et gentile tumentes 430 duris rumpunt umbonibus agmen —
Euboicum
reppulit erepto cunei ductore Menalca. hie et mente Lacon, crudi torrentis alumnus nee turpavit avos hastam ultra pectus euntem, ne pudor in tergo, per et ossa et viscera retro 435 extrahit atque hosti dextra labente remittit
—
sanguineam dilecta genis morientis oberrant Taygeta et pugnae laudataque pectora^ matri. Phaedimon lasiden arcu Dircaeus Amyntas iam palpitat arvis destinat heu celeres Parcae Phaedimus, et certi nondum tacet arcus Amyntae. abstulit ex vunero dextram Calydonius Agreus 441 Phegeos ilia suum terra tenet improba ferrum extimuit sparsa inter tela iacentem et movet praegrediens truncamque tamen percussit Acoetes. Iphin atrox Acamas, Argum ferus impulit Hypseus, stravit Abanta Pheres, diversaque volnera flentes Iphis eques, pedes Argus, Abas auriga iacebant. 447 Inachidae gemini geminos e sanguine Cadmi :
:
!
:
;
—
occultos galeis saeva ignorantia belli perculerant ferro ; sed dum spolia omnia caesis eripiunt, videre nefas, et maestus uterque respicit
ad fratrem pariterque errasse queruntur. ^
226
pectora
P
:
verbera w.
450
THEBAID, alternate hurricanes to
VIII. 424-452 afflict
the world, opposing
meet in heaven, now Auster's storms prenow Aquilo's, till in the conflict of the winds
forces vail,
one conquers, be
it Auster's overwhelming rains, or Aquilo's clear air. At the outset of the fight Asopian Hj^seus repulsed the Oebahan squadrons for these in fierce pride of race were thrusting their stout bucklers through the Euboean lines and slew Menalcas the leader of the phalanx. He, a true-souled Spartan, child of the mountain-torrent, shamed not his ancestry, but pulled back through bones and bowels the spear that would pass beyond his breast, lest his back should show dishonour, and with failing hand hurled it back all bloody at the foe his loved Taygetus swims before his dying eyes, and his combats, and the strong breast his mother praised. Dircaean Amyntas marks out Phaedimus, son of lasus, with his bow ah the swift Fates already Phaedimus lies gasping on the field, and not yet has the bow of sure Amyntas ceased to twang. Calydonian Agreus cut the right arm of Phegeus from off its shoulder on the ground it holds the sword in unyielding grip and shakes it Acoetes advancing feared it as it lay amid scattered weapons, and struck at it, severed though it was. Stern Acamas pierced Iphis, fierce Hypseus Argus, Pheres laid Abas low, and groaning
—
—
;
:
!
!
:
:
from their different wounds they lay, horseman Iphis, foot-soldier Argus, chariot-driver Abas. Inachian twins had smitten with the sword twin brothers of Cadmus' blood, hidden by their helms war's cruel ignorance but stripping the dead of all their spoils they saw the horror of their deed, and each in dismay looked on his brother, and cried that they 227 I
—
—
STATIUS cultor Ion Pisae cultorem Daphnea Cirrhae turbatis prostravit equis hunc laudat ab alto luppiter, hunc tardus frustra miseratur Apollo. ;
455
Ingentes Fortuna viros inlustrat utrimque sanguine in adverso Danaos Cadmeius Haexnon^ sternit agitque, furens sequitur Tyria agmina Tydeus; :
Pallas huic praesens, ilium Tirynthius implet. qualiter hiberni summis duo montibus amnes
460
franguntur geminaque cadunt in plana I'uina contendisse putes, uter arva arbustaque tollat altius aut superet pontes ecce^ una receptas confundit iani vallis aquas sibi quisque superbus 465 ire cupit, pontoque negant descendere mixti. Ibat fumiferam quatiens Onchestius Idas lampada per medios turbabatque agmina Graium, igne viam rumpens magno quem comminus ictu Tydeos hasta feri dispulsa casside fixit. 470 ille ingens in terga iacet, stat fronte superstes lancea, conlapsae veniunt in tempora flammae. prosequitur Tydeus "saevos ne dixeris Argos, igne tuo, Thebane rogum concedimus arde :
;
;
;
:
—
—
'
!
inde, velut primo tigris gavisa cruore 475 per totum cupit ire pecus, sic Aona saxo, ense Pholum, Chromin ense, duos Helicaonas hasta transigit, Aegaeae Veneris quos Maera sacerdos ediderat prohibente dea ; vos praeda cruenti it saevas etiamnum mater ad aras. Nee minus Herculeum contra vagus Haemona
Tydeos,
^ ^
ducit
Haemon P heros w. Pw et cum Garrod.
ecce
:
:
" Zeus and Apollo were worshipped at Olyinpia and Delphi respectively.
228
THEBAID,
VIII. 453-480
were both at fault. Ion worshipper at Pisa overthrew Daphneus worshipper at Cirrha," in the confusion of his steeds this one Jupiter praises from on high, that one Apollo vainly pities, too late to aid. Fortune on either side of the bloody fray sheds lustre on mighty warriors Cadmean Haemon slays and routs the Danaans, Tydeus madly pursues the ranks of T\Te the one has Pallas' present aid, the other the Tirynthian inspires just as when two torrents break forth from mountain heights and fall upon the plain in twofold ruin, one would think they strove, which could whelm crops and trees or bury their bridges in a deeper flood lo at last one vale receives and mingles their waters, but proudly each would fain go by himself, and they refuse to flow down to ocean with united streams. Idas of Onchestus strode through the midst shaking a smoky brand, and disarrayed the Grecian ranks, forcing his way with fire but a great lunge of savage Tydeus' spear from nigh at hand smote through his helm and pierced him in huge length he falls upon :
;
;
:
;
!
;
:
the lance stays upright in his forehead, the flaming torch sinks upon his temples. Tydeus pursues him with a taunt " Call not Argos cruel bum, Theban, in thy own flames see, we grant thee a pyre " Then like a tigress exulting in her first blood and eager to go through all the herd, he slays Aon viith a stone, Pholus and Chromis with the sword, with thrust of lance two Helicaons, whom Maera, priestess of Aegaean \^enus, bore against the goddess' pleasure victims are ye of bloodstained Tydeus, but even now your mother visits the pitiless altars. No less on the other side is Haemon, ward of Hercules, led on by restless vigour ; with unsated his back,
:
;
;
!
:
229
—
— STATIUS sanguis
:
inexpleto rapitur per milia ferro,
-481
nunc tumidae Calydonis opes, nunc torva Pylenes agmina, nunc maestae fundens Pleuronis alumnos, donee in Olenium fessa iam cuspide Buten incidit. hunc turmis obversum et abire vetantem 485 adgreditur puer ille, puer malasque comamque integer, ignaro cui tunc Thebana bipennis in galeam librata venit finduntur^ utroque tempora dividuique cadunt in bracchia crines, 490 et non hoc metuens inopino limine vita exsiluit. tunc flavum Hypanin flavumque Politen ille genas Phoebo, crinem hie pascebat laccho saevus uterque deus victis Hyperenora iungit conversumque fuga Damasum sed lapsa per armos ;
:
:
—
;
495 hasta viri trans pectus abit parmamque tenenti excutit et summa fugiens in cuspide portat. Sterneret adversos etiamnum Ismenius Haemon Inachidas nam tela regit viresque ministrat Amphitryoniades saevum sed Tydea contra 500 Pallas agit. iamque adverso venere favore comminus, et placido prior haec Tirynthius ore " fida soror, quaenam hunc belli caligine nobis congressum fortuna tulit ? num regia luno hoc molita nefas ? citius me fulmina contra 505 infandum ruere et magno bellare parenti aspiciat. genus huic sed mitto agnoscere, quando
—
—
:
!
—
—
tu diversa foves, nee si ipsum comminus Hyllum Tydeos hasta tui Stygioque ex orbe remissum Amphitryona petat teneo aeternumque tenebo, ;
^ finduntur BQ {both 2nd hand) duntur, striduntiir other ifss.
230
SN:
funduntur, scin-
— THEBAID,
VIII. 481-509
sword he speeds through thousands, now laying low the pride of Calydon, now Pylene's grim array, now sad Pleuron's sons, until with wearied spear he happens on Olenian Butes. Him he attacks, as he turns toward his men and forbids them to retreat ; a lad Avas he, with cheeks yet smooth and hair unshorn, and the Theban battle-axe aimed against his his temples are cleft helmet takes him unaware asunder, and his locks diAided fall upon his shoulders, and he, not fearing such a fate, passed from life unwitting on its threshold. Then he slays fair-haired Hj-panis and Polites this one was keeping his beard for Phoebus, that one his hair for lacchus but cruel was either god and joins H}-perenor to his victims, but the hero's and Damasus who turned to flee lance sped through his shoulders and passed out by his heart, and tearing his buckler from his grasp, carried it on the lance-point as it flew. Even yet would Ismenian Haemon be laying low his Inachian adversaries for Amphitryon's son directs but against him his darts and gives him strength ;
—
;
—
;
—
—
Pallas xu-ged fierce Tydeus. And now they " met in rivalry of favour, and first the Tirynthian thus calmly spoke " Good sister, what chance has thus brought :
about our meeting in the fog of war ? Has royal Jimo de\-ised this e\il ? Sooner may she see me assault the thunderbolt and unutterable thought This man's race make war against the mighty Sire but I disown him, since thou dost aid his foes, ay, were it even Hyllus or AmphitrA'on sent back from the world of Styx that the spear of thy Tydeus I remember, and shall sought in close combat " i.e., Pallas and Hercules, whom Statius describes as !
—
!
—
;
actually present to support their rival champions.
231
:
STATIUS quantum haec diva manus, quotiens
dum
sudaverit aegis
511 omnes heu comes invia mecum Tartara, ni superos Acheron excluderet, isses, tu patriam caelumque mihi, quis tanta relatu aequet ? habe totas, si mens excidere,^ Thebas. 515 cedo equidem veniamque precor." sic orsus abibat. Pallada mulcet honos rediit ardore remisso ista mihi, duris
famulus
lustro vagus terras
;
ipsa
casibus !
:
voltus et erecti sederunt pectoris angues.
deum, levius Cadmeius Haemon 520 nuUoque manum cognoscit in ictu. tunc magis atque magis vires animusque recedunt, nee pudor ire retro cedentem Acheloius heros Sensit abesse
tela rotat
;
impetit,^ et librans uni sibi missile telum direxit iactus,
summae qua margine parmae
ima sedet galea
et iuguli vitalia lucent.
525
nee frustrata manus, mortemque invenerat hasta sed prohibet paulumque umeri libare sinistri praebuit et merito parcit Tritonia fratri. ille tamen nee stare loco nee comminus ire 530 amplius aut voltus audet perferre cruenti Tydeos aegra animo vis ac fiducia cessit qualis saetigeram Lucana cuspide frontem ;
;
strictus aper, penitus cui
non
infossa cerebro
volnera, nee felix dextrae tenor, in latus iras
iam non venit obvius hastae. 535 Ecce ducem turmae certa indignatus in hostem spicula felici Prothoum torquere lacerto,
frangit, et expertae
^
excidere
Kohlmann *
232
:
impetit w
exscindere w :
:
impedit P.
excedere P.
;
THEBAID,
VIII. 510-537
remember everlastingly, how much that godlike hand, how oft that aegis of thine hath laboured for me, while, a thrall to hards liip, I roamed through every yea thou wouldst have gone thyself to pathTartarus with me, did not Acheron exclude the gods. Thou gavest me my home, ay, heaven who could name a service so great ? All Thebes is thine, if thou hast a mind to destroy it. I yield and crave pardon." So he spake, and departed. Pallas is soothed by the praise her countenance is calm again, the anger spent, and the snakes erect upon her bosom sank to rest. Cadmean Haemon felt that the god had left him ; more weakly he hiu"ls his darts, nor recognizes his land
!
;
less
—
;
any stroke. Then more and more his powers and courage fail him, nor is he ashamed to retreat as he gives ground the Acheloian hero assails him, and poising a spear that he alone could wield aims the blow where the rim of the helmet rests on the topmost margin of the shield and the vulnerable throat gleams white. Nor erred his hand, and the spear had found a deadly spot, but Tritonia forbade, and suffered it to touch the left shoulder, sparing her brother for his merits' sake. But the warrior dares no longer hold his ground or engage or bear the sight of murderous Tydeus his courage grows faint, and skill in
;
has departed as when the bristly ^isage of a boar has been grazed by a Lucanian javeUn-point, and the blow has not sunk deep into his brain nor has the aim been true, he lets the anger of his side -stroke weaken, nor attacks the spear he knows too well. Lo now, indignant that Prothous the leader of a squadron is hurling sure darts with happy aim against his confidence
:
!
233
STATIUS turbidus Oenides una duo corpora pinu,
cornipedemque equitemque, ferit ruit ille ruentem in Prothoum lapsasque manu quaerentis habenas 540 in voltus galeam clipeumque in pectora calcat, saucius extremo donee cum sanguine frenos respuit et iuncta domino cervice recumbit. sic ulmus vitisque, duplex iactura colenti, 545 Gaurano de monte cadunt, sed maestior ulmus quaerit utrumque nemus, nee tam sua bracchia labens quam gemit adsuetas invitaque proterit uvas. sumpserat in Danaos Heliconius arma Corymbus, ante comes Musis, Stygii cui conseia pensi 550 ipsa diu positis letum praedixerat astris Uranie. cupit ille tamen pugnasque virosque, longa iacet ipse canendus forsitan ut caneret laude, sed amissum mutae^ flevere sorores. Pactus Agenoream primis Atys ibat ab annis 555 Ismenen, Tyrii iuvenis non advena belli. quamvis Cirrha domus, soceros nee tristibus actis aversatus erat sponsam quin cast us amanti :
;
;
squalor et indigni commendat gratia luetus. ipse quoque egregius, nee pectora virginis illi diversa, inque vicem, sineret fortuna, placebant. 560 bella vetant taedas, iuvenique hinc maior in hostes ira ruit primis immixtus et agmina Lernae nunc pedes ense vago, prensis nunc celsus habenis, ceu spectetur, agit. triplici velaverat ostro ;
^
mutae w
:
inusae
PDS.
« Ovpavla, the Muse of heavenly lore, and therefore, " appropriately, the teacher of astrology. " Stygium pensum is the doom spun for him by the Fates in the underworld.
234
THEBAID,
VIII. 538-564
the foe, Oenides furiously strikes two bodies with one shaft of pine, horseman and horn-footed steed : Prothous falls and the horse upon him, and as he gropes for the lost reins the horse tramples the helm upon his face and the shield upon his breast, until as the last drops ebb from his wound he casts off the bridle and sinks with his head upon his master's body. Even so from Mount Gauranus fall an elmtree and a vine together, a twofold loss to the husbandman, but the elm more sorroAvful seeks also
comrade tree, and falling grieves less for its boughs than for the familiar grapes it crushes against its ^vill. Corymbus of Helicon had taken arms against the Danaans, formerly the Muses' friend, to whom Uranie ° herself, knowing full well his Stygian destiny, had long foretold his death by the p>osition of the stars. Yet seeks he battles and warriors, perchance to find theme for song now Ues he low, worthy himself to be sung with lasting praise, but the Sisters wept his loss in silence. Atys, betrothed from childhood to Ismene, offspring of Agenor, went his way, a youth no stranger to the wars of Thebes, though Cirrha was his home, nor had he shunned his bride's kinsmen for their evil deeds nay, her misery undeserved and chaste
for its ov^Ti
;
;
himiiUty commend her to her lover's favour. He too was noble, nor was the maiden's heart tmmed from him, and they were pleasing in each other's But war forbids sight, had only Fortune suffered it. his marriage, and hence the youth's fiercer ^v^ath against the foe among the foremost he rushes on, and now afoot >vith errant sword, now grasping the ;
reins aloft, as
though at some spectacle, he drives
before him the ranks of
Lema.
With threefold 235
STATIUS surgentes etiamnum umeros et levia mater 565 pectora nunc auro phaleras auroque sagittas cingulaque et manicas, ne coniuge vilior iret, presserat et mixtum cono crispaverat aurum. talibus heu fidens vocat ultro in proelia Graios. ac primum in faciles grassatus cuspide turmas 570 arma refert sociis et in agmina fida peracta caede redit. sic Hyrcana leo Caspius umbra nudus adhuc nulloque iubae flaventis honore ;
!
magnique etiamnum sanguinis insons, haud procul a stabulis captat custode remoto
terribilis
segne pecus teneraque
famem consumit
in^
575
agna.
mox ignotum
armis ac solo corpore mensus timuit, fragilique lacessere telo saepius infrendentem aliis aliosque sequentem ausus erat. tandem invalidos Aetolus ad ictus forte refert oculos et formidabile ridens " iamdudum video, magnum cupis, improbe, leti
Tydea non
580
:
nomen " ait simul audacem non ense nee hasta dignatus leviter digitis imbelle solutis abiecit iaculum 585 latebras tamen inguinis alte missile, ceu totis intortum viribus, hausit. ;
:
praeterit
Oenides.
haud dubium fati et spoliare superbit " neque enim has Marti aut tibi, bellica
Pallas,
exuvias figemus" ferre ^
pudor
;
consumit in ^
Pw
arceat
co
si
:
:
"procul arceat^ ipsum bellum comitata relictis,
ait,
vix,
590
depascitur iV, and written over in D. afuat conj. Garrod.
habeat
P
:
" procul arceat pudor me ipsum has exuvias ferre," is given by analogy the same construction as " prohibeat." " i.e.,
where " arceat "
236
THEBAID,
VIII. 565-590
robe of purple had his mother clothed his yet growing shoulders and smooth breast, and now, lest he should go in meaner raiment than his spouse, she had plated with gold his harness and with gold his arrows and his belt and armlets, and had encrusted his helm with inlay of gold. Trusting alas in such things as these he challenges the Greeks to combat, and first assailing a weak company with his spear he brings back spoil of arms to his comrades, and the slaughter accomplished returns to the friendly lines. So a Caspian lion beneath Hyrcanian shade, still smooth nor terrible yet in the yellow glory of his mane, and guiltless of great carnage, raids the slow-moving flock not far from their fold while the shepherd is away, and sates his hunger on a tender lamb. Soon he feared not to attack Tydeus, knowing not his prowess but judging only by his stature, and dared to vex him with his frail Aveapon, as oft he shouted taunts at some and pursued others. At length the Aetolian turned his gaze by chance upon his feeble efforts, and with a terrible laugh " Long since," he cries, " I have seen, insatiate one, 'tis a famous death that thou desirest " and forthwith, deeming the bold youth worthy of neither sword nor spear, with careless fingers lightly flung an unwarUke shaft yet the missile drained deep the recesses of the groin, as though hurled with all his might. His death assured, Oenides passes him by, and is too proud to plunder. " For not such spoils as these," says he, " will I hang up to Mars, or to thee, warhke Pallas shame keep me far from taking them for my own pleasure " scarcely had Deipyle ^ left her bower and come with !
:
!
;
;
;
* She was the daughter of Adrastus, and had married Tydeus, see ii. 201 sqq.
237
STATIUS iJeipyle thalamis,
illi
inludenda^ tulissem."
maiora ad praemia niente ducitur innumeris veluti leo forte potitus caedibus imbellis vitulos mollesque iuvencas transmittit magno furor est in sanguine mergi, 595 nee nisi regnantis cervice recumbere tauri. at non semianimi clamore Menoecea lapsus falUt Atys praevertit equos curruque citato desilit instabat pubes Tegeaea iacenti, nee prohibent Tyrii. " pudeat, Cadmea iuventus, terrigenas mentita patres quo tenditis " inquit, 601 " degeneres ? meliusne iacet pro sanguine nostro hospes Atys ? tantum hospes adhuc et coniugis ultor infelix nondum iste suae nos pignora tanta prodimus ? " insurgunt iusto firmata pudore 605 agmine, cuique suae rediere in pectora curae. sic ait, et belli :
:
:
:
!
;
Interea thalami secreta in parte sorores, par aliud morum miserique innoxia proles Oedipodae, varias miscent sermone querellas. 610 nee mala quae iuxta, sed longa ab origine fati, haec matris taedas, oculos ast ilia paternos, altera regnantem, profugum gemit altera fratrem,
ambae. gravis hinc miseri^ cunctatio voti nutat utroque timor, quemnam hoc certamine victum, quern vicisse velint tacite praeponderat exsul. 615 sic Pandioniae repetunt ubi fida volucres bella
:
:
^ *
iniudenda w inlaudanda P. misti Barth, edd., from later mss.
miseri Pui
:
:
as he sucks its blood. Nightingales, from Philomela, daughter of Pandion, king of Athens, changed into a nightingale. She grieves " ''
238
i.e.,
THEBAID,
VIII. 591-616
me
to the war, would I have borne her spoils that she might mock at." So saying, he is led on to dream as when a lion by chance of nobler prizes of the fight hath slaughter inniunerable in his power, he passes he is mad to by the unwarlike calves and heifers drench himself in some mighty victim's blood, nor But to crouch " save on the neck of a chieftain bull. Menoeceus fails not to hear the dying wail of fallen thither he turns his horses, and leaps down Atys the Tegean warriors were from his swift chariot drawing nigh him where he lay, nor did the Tyrians hold them off. " For shame, Cadmean youth," he Whither cries, " that behe your earthborn sires Hath he not fallen more fly ye, degenerate ones ? nobly for our folk, the stranger Atys } Ay, still but a stranger, nor yet, hapless one, hath he avenged " shall rve betray a pledge so great ? his spouse rally, and each Heartened by righteous shame they bethinks himself of those he loves. Meanwhile in the seclusion of their chamber the innocent pair, guiltless offspring of unhappy sisters Oedipus mingle their converse with, varying complaint. Nor grieve they for their present ills, but starting from the far origins of their fate, one laments their mother's marriage, the other their father's eyes, this one the brother that reigns, that one him that Long do they is an exile, and both lament the war. hesitate in their unhappy prayers fear sways them either way, in doubt whom they wish defeated in but in their silent the fight, and whom victorious hearts the exile wins the day. So when Pandion's birds ^ seek once more trusty welcome and the homes :
:
:
;
!
;
— —
:
:
for her son
Itys,
whom
she slew to avenge his father,
Tereus's, cruelty to her sister Procne.
289
ST ATI us hospitia atque larem bruma pulsante relictum, stantque super nidos veterisque exordia fati adnarrant tectis, it^ truncum ac flebile murmur verba putant, voxque ilia tamen non dissona verbis, atque ibi post laerimas et longa silentia rursus 621 incohat Ismene " quisnam hie mortalibus error ? quae deeepta fides ? curam invigilare quieti claraque per somnos animi simulacra reverti ? ecce ego, quae thalamos nee si pax alta maneret, 626 tractarem sensu pudet heu conubia vidi nocte, soror ; sponsum unde mihi sopor attulit amens vix notum visu ? semel his in sedibus ilium, dum mea nescio quo spondentur foedera pacto, 630 respexi non sponte, soror. turbata repente ;
:
—
!
omnia cernebam, subitusque
—
intercidit ignis,
meque sequebatur rabido clamore reposcens mater Atyn. quaenam haec dubiae praesagia cladis nee timeo, dum tuta domus milesque reeedat^
?
635 Doricus et tumidos liceat componere fratres." Talia nectebant, subito cum pigra tumultu expavit domus, et multo sudore receptus fertur Atys, servans animam iam sanguine nuUo, cui manus in plaga, dependet languida cervix 640 exterior clipeo, crinesque a fronte supini. prima videt caramque tremens locasta vocabat Ismenen namque hoc solum moribunda precatur vox generi, solum hoc gelidis iam nomen inerrat faucibus. exclamant famulae, tollebat in ora :
^
it
Markland
:
et
Pw.
The nightingales
^
recedat w
:
superstes P.
feel that they are expressing their and, Statins adds, their notes, thougli not words, ") (" tamen as expressive as words can he. There is are yet real poetry in this thought. "
grief,
240
— THEBAID,
VIII. 617-644
they left when winter drove them forth, and they stand over the nest and tell to the house the old story of their woe, a broken, dolorous sound goes forth they deem it words, nor in truth does their voice sound other than words." Then after tears and a long silence Ismene begins again " What delusion is this of mortals ? What means this trust deceived ? Is it true then that our cares are awake in time of rest, and our fancies return in sleep so clearly ? Lo I, who could not bear the thought of wedlock, not even in sure abiding peace, this very night, my sister ah for shame I beheld myself a bride whence did my fevered slumber bring my husband before :
:
!
!
!
my
\dsion,
—
whom
I
;
scarce
know by
sight
?
Once
in
caught sight of him, my sister, not of my own ^\^ll ^while pledges in some wise were exchanged for my betrothal. On the instant all was confusion to my \-iew and sudden fire fell between this palace I
—
us, and his mother followed me, demanding Atys back with loud clamour. What presage of disaster to whom I know not is this ? And yet I have no fear, so but our home be safe and the Dorian host depart, and we can reconcile our haughty
brothers."
Such was their converse, when the quiet house started at a sudden tumult, and Atys, rescued at great labour's cost, bloodless but still living, is borne in his hand is on his hurt, outside the shield the neck droops languid, and the tresses hang backward from his forehead. Jocasta saw him first and trembling called his beloved Ismene for that prayer alone do the dying accents of her son-in-law utter, that name alone hovers on his parched mouth. The women shriek, and the maiden hfts her hands to her face ;
;
;
VOL.
II
R
241
:
STATIUS virgo manus, tenuit saevus pudor attamen ire 645 cogitur, indulget summum hoc locasta iacenti, ostenditque oiFertque. quater iam morte sub ipsa ad nomen visus defectaque^ fortiter ora sustulit illam unam neglecto lumine caeli aspicit et vultu non exsatiatur amato. 650 tunc quia nee genetrix iuxta positusque beata morte pater, sponsae munus miserabile tradunt declinare genas ibi demum teste remoto fassa pios gemitus lacrimasque in lumina fudit. Dumque ea per Thebas, aliis serpentibus ardens 655 et face mutata bellum integrabat Enyo. arma volunt, primos veluti modo comminus ictus sustulerint omnisque etiamnum luceat ensis. eminet Oenides. quamvis et harundine certa Parthenopaeus agat, morientumque ora furenti 660 Hippomedon proculcet equo, Capaneaque pinus iam procul Aoniis volet agnoscenda catervis Tydeos ilia dies, ilium fugiuntque tremuntque clamantem "quo terga datis ? licet ecce peremptos ulcisci socios maestamque rependere noctem. 665 ille ego inexpletis solus qui caedibus hausi quinquaginta animas totidem, totidem heia^ ;
;
;
:
:
:
gregatim
manus nulline patres, nulline iacentum unanimi fratres ? quae tanta oblivio luctus ? 669 quam pudet Inachias contentum abiisse Mycenas hine super Thebis ? haec robora regis ? ubi autem egregius dux ille mihi ? " simul ordine laevo ipsum exhortantem cuneos capitisque superbi ferte
!
!
^
*
defectaque Heinsius (xii. 325) deiectaque Pw. totidem heia totidem, totidem heia Kohlmann
totidem totidemque
:
:
w. "
242
Goddess of war.
P
THEBAIC,
VIII. 645-673
shame restrains her, yet she must needs go to him, Jocasta grants the dying man this final boon, and shows her-^nd sets her before him. Four times at the very point of death he bravely raised his eyes and faihng \ision at her name at her alone, neglecting the light of heaven, he gazes, and cannot gaze enough on the face he loves. Then because his mother is not near and his father is laid in bhssful death, they give to his betrothed the sad office of closing his eyes there at last un^^'itnessed and alone, she gave utterance to %\'ifely grief and drowned her eyes in tears. WTiile these things were happening in Thebes, Enyo," afire >\-ith torch fresh-charged and other serpents, was restoring the fight. They yearn for battle, as though they had but lately borne the opening shock of combat hand to hand, and every sword still shone bright and clear. Oenides is preeminent though Parthenopaeus draw an unerring shaft, and Hippomedon trample the faces of the dying with furioiLS steed, though the spear of Capaneus fly even from far with a message to Aonian troops, from him they flee that day was the day of Tydeus " Whither turn ye and tremble, as he cries out your backs ? Lo thus can ye avenge your slain comrades, and atone for that sad night. I am he who took fifty lives in unsated carnage bring as many, ay, as many squadrons in swarms Are there no fathers, no loving brothers of the fallen ? Why such forgetfulness of sorrow ? Shame on me that I departed content to Inachian Mycenae Are these all that stand for Thebes ? Are these yovir monarch's strength.' And where can I find that noble chieftain?" Therevsith he spies him on the left of the array, encouraging his columns and conspicuous by the flash fierce
;
;
;
:
:
I
;
!
!
243
STATIUS insignem fulgore videt nee segnius ardens occurrit, niveo quam flammiger ales olori imminet et magna trepidum circumligat umbra, ;
675
" Aoniae rex o iustissime gentis, imus in arma palam tandemque ostendimus enses, " an noctem et solitas placet exspectare tenebras ? ille nihil contra, sed stridula cornus in hostem 680
tunc prior
it
referens
:
mandata
iamiam
in fine viae
impulit
:
quam
ducis,
providus heros
percussam obliquat, et ipse telum ingens avide et quanto non ante lacerto
lancea.
ibat atrox finem positura duello
convertere oculos utrimque faventes
Sidonii Graique dei
obstat et infando differt Eteoclea fratri cuspis in
:
armigerum Phlegyan peccavit.
pugna virum,
stricto
Aetolus, retroque
arma ducem.
sic
685
crudelis Erinys
;
nam
ibi
ingens
saevior inruit ense
datum Thebana tegebant densa lupum iam nocte sub
arcet ab adprenso pastorum turba iuvenco
690
atra
;
improbus erigitur contra, nee cura vetantes impetere ilium, ilium, semel in quern venerat, urget. 695 non secus obiectas acies turbamque minorem :
manu
dissimulat transitque
;
pectora Deilochi, Clonii latus, perforat Hippotadae
;
tamen ora Thoantis, ilia
truncis sua
torvi
membra
remittit
interdum galeasque rotat per nubila plenas. et iam corporibus sese spoliisque cadentum "
end
244
700
Neither Argive nor Theban deities wished the war in this
way.
to
THEBAID, of haughty helm
VIII. 674-700
not less s-wiftly does he rush to than the bird that wields the flame swoops on the frightened snow-white swan and
meet him
all
;
afire,
him in his mighty shadow. Then he first " Most righteous king of the Aonian people, meet we in open fight, and show we our swords at last, or doth it please thee to await the night and thy wonted darkness ? " Nought spake he in reply, but the whizzing cornel-shaft comes flying against his the prudent foe, bearing the chieftain's message hero strikes it aside just as it reached its mark, and himself eagerly hurled a mighty weapon with strength unknown before on was the angry lance On it the gods, Sidonian flying, to end the war. and Greek, who favoured either side, turned their eyes " cruel Erinys checks its comrse, and prethe serves Eteocles for a brother's impious deed enfolds
speaks
:
;
:
;
;
erring spear-point lighted on Phlegyas the charioteer. Then a great fight arose of heroes, for the Aetolian, his sword, charged more fiercely, while Theban warriors protected the retreating king. So in the murk of night a crowd of shepherds forces away
drawing
a wolf from the bullock he has seized but he relentup against them, nor cares to attack those who bar his way him, him only, whom he had once assailed, does he pursue. Just so does Tydeus ignore the lines arrayed against him and the lesser throng, and pass them by in the fight yet he wounds the face of Thoas, the breast of Deilochus, Clonius in the flank, stem Hippotades in the groin now he throws back their limbs to mutilated trunks, or whirls heads and helms together through the air. And now he had enclosed himself with the spoils and corpses of the ;
lessly rises
;
;
;
245
•
STATIUS clauserat
omnia
;
unum
acies circum consumitur,
unum
summis haec ossibus haerent, pars frustrata cadunt, partem Tritonia vellit, multa rigent clipeo. densis iam consitus^ hastis ferratum quatit umbo nemus, tergoque fatiscit 705 atque umeris gentilis aper nusquam ardua coni gloria, quique apicem torvae Gradivus habebat cassidis, baud laetum domino ruit omen inusta^ temporibus nuda aera sedent, circumque sonori tela vovent
:
;
:
vertice percusso volvuntur in ai*ma molares. in galea, iam saucia proluit ater
710
iam cruor
pectora permixtus sudore et sanguine torrens. respicit hortantes socios et Pallada fidam, longius opposita celantem lumina parma ibat enim magnum laerimis inflectere patrem. Ecce secat zephyros ingentem fraxinus iram fortunamque ferens, teli non eminet auctor Astacides Melanippus erat, nee prodidit ipse, et vellet latuisse manum, sed gaudia turmae :
715
:
monstrabant trepidum nam flexus in ilia Tydeus submissum latus et elipei laxaverat orbem. 721 clamorem Aonii miscent gemitumque Pelasgi, obiectantque manus indignantemque tuentur. ille per oppositos longe rimatus amarxma Astaciden, totis animae se cogit in ictum 725 relliquiis telumque iaeit, quod proximus Hopleus praebuerat perit expressus conamine sanguis, ;
:
—
—
cupidum bellare quis ardor poscentem hastas mediaque in morte negantem exspirare trahunt, summique in margine campi 730
tunc
tristes socii
!
et
^
consitus
CO
:
constitit
"
246
P.
i.e.,
^
inusta w
of his helm.
:
inulta P.
THEBAID,
the ring of foes spends itself on him alone, him alone all darts aspire some lodge A^ithin limbs, some fall amiss, others Tritonia tears away,
fallen at his
VIII. 701-730
;
;
many stand stiffly in his shield. Thick-planted already with spears, his buckler is a quivering grove of steel, and his native boarskin is torn upon his back and shoulders gone is the towering glor^- of the crest, and the Mars that held the peak of his grim helmet falls, no happy omen to its lord. The bare bronze*' is fixed and welded in his temples, stones ;
strike his
His helm
head and
now
fills
fall
rattling about his armour. and now his wounded
\\ith blood,
is drenched by a dark mingling torrent of blood and sweat. He looks round upon his applauding comrades and on faithful Pallas, who conceals from afar her face behind her shield for she was on her way to soften vrith her tears her mighty sire. Lo an ashen spear charged ^\ith might}' WTath and fate cleaves the zephyrs, its author unperceived Melanippus it was, the son of Astacus, and he betrayed not his oN^Ti work and would fain have been hidden, but the joy of his troop revealed him all afirighted ; for Tydeus bending o'er his groin had
breast
;
!
:
sunk upon his side and let go his round shield. Aonians and Pelasgians mingle their shouts and groans, and form a barrier, and protect the indignant hero. He spying afar through the foe the hated Astacides, summons for a stroke all the vital forces that remain, and hurls a dart that Hopleus who stood by had given him the effort makes the blood spout and flow. Then his grie\"ing comrades drag him away, eager yet to fight what fiery zeal and calling for spears, and even in death's agony refusing to die, and set him on the farthest margin 247 ;
—
—
!
STATIUS efFultum gemina latera inclinantia
parma
ponunt, ac saevi rediturum ad proelia Martis promittunt flentes. sed et ipse recedere caelum ingentesque animos extremo frigore labi sensit, et innixus terrae " miserescite " clamat,
" Inachidae
735
non ossa precor referantur ut Argos Aetolumve larem nee enim mihi cura supremi funeris odi artus fragilemque hunc corporis usum, :
;
:
desertorem animi. caput, o caput, o mihi si quis adportet, Melanippe, tuum nam volveris arvis, 740 fido equidem, nee me virtus suprema fefellit. i, precor, Atrei^ si quid tibi sanguinis umquam, Hippomedon, vade, o primis puer inclyte bellis Areas, et Argolicae Capaneu iam maxime turmae." Moti omnes, sed primus abit primusque repertum Astaciden medio Capaneus e pulvere tollit 746 spirantem laevaque super cervice reportat, terga cruentantem concussi vulneris unda qualis ab Arcadio rediit Tirynthius antro captivumque suem clamantibus intulit Argis. 750 Erigitur Tydeus voltuque occurrit et amens !
:
laetitiaque iraque, ut singultantia vidit era trahique oculos seseque adgnovit in illo, imperat abscisum porgi, laevaque receptum spectat atrox hostile caput, gliscitque tepentis lumina torva videns et adhuc dubitantia figi. infelix contentus erat plus exigit ultrix Tisiphone ; iamque inflexo Tritonia patre venerat et misero decus immortale ferebat, atque ilium effracti perfusum tabe cerebri
755
:
^
Atrei
Pw
:
Arcadii
"
248
BQ
:
Argei Schroder.
Of Erymanthus.
760
THEBAID,
VIII. 731-760
field, propped against shields on either side, and promise with tears a return to the conflicts of fierce Mars. But he too now felt the light of heaven fail him and his mighty spirit yield to the final chill, and lying on the ground he cries " Have pity, sons of Inachus I pray not that my bones be taken to Argos or my Aetolian home I care not for funeral obsequies I hate my limbs and my body so frail and useless, deserter of the soul within it. Thy head, thy head, O Melanippus, could one but bring me that for thou art grovelling on the plain, so indeed I trust, nor did my valour fail me at the last. Go, Hippomedon, I beg, if thou has aught of Atreus' blood, go thou, Arcadian, youth reno>\-ned in thy first wars, and thou, O Capaneus, mightiest now of " all the Argive host All were moved, but Capaneus first darts away, and finding the son of Astacus lifts him still breathing from the dust, and returns with him on his left shoulder, staining his back A\ith blood from the stricken
of the
:
:
;
;
!
!
wound
in such wise did the Tirynthian return from the Arcadian lair, when he brought home to applauding Argos the captive boar." Tydeus raises himself and turns his gaze upon him, then mad vriih joy and anger, when he saw them drag the gasping visage, and saw his handiwork therein, he bids them cut off and hand to him his foe's fierce head, and seizing it in his left hand he gazes at it, and glows to see it still warm in life and the wrathful eyes still flickering ere they closed. Content was the wretched man, but avenging Tisiphone demands yet more. And now, her sire appeased, had Tritonia come, and was bringing immortal lustre to the unhappy hero when lo she sees him befouled with 240 :
:
I
— STATIUS aspicit et vivo scelerantem
sanguine fauces stetit aspera Gorgon crinibus emissis rectique ante ora cerastae velavere deam fugit aversata iacentem, nee prius astra subit, quam mystica lampas et insons Elisos multa purgavit lumina lympha. 766
nee comites auferre valent
—
:
;
"
This hideous scene was imitated by Dante in the 11. 125 sq.), where Count Ugolino gnaws
/w/